yep.
For me i dont think it illegal considering the person did give u the email..Although if u try to get or hack his password without permission and you get caught that is illegal and you can face serious charges for that.
There is no specific legal age requirement for obtaining an email address. However, most email service providers require users to be at least 13 years old in compliance with the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) in the United States.
Lori, im NOT sure about an answer. If you will post your state or email me, I will try to give you state specific advice. Naybe someone else will answer for you who already knows.
Not if you are the fiduciary of the estate.
Is email a legal document in Canada.
The executor can do that. It allows them to track the bills and claims against the estate.
I don't know of any games that may let you get away without using a verification email address. Usually they make you do that so that your parent or legal guardian can receive a notification for what their child is signing up for.
Your question may be a legal question.If there is a legal question, and the association has not documented the use of e-mail addresses as equivalent to a members' address list, they may not be assumed to be the same.AnswerNo. An email list is not the same as member address list. Every owner may not have email and those are usually provided for the convenience of the owner who does use email. "The" address list would detail the mailing address of each unit and may include other addresses for non-resident unit owners should the association or management company need to send any notifications in writing.
A slang term used to describe someone who knows some law but is not an attorney is "armchair lawyer." This term is often used to refer to individuals who have a basic understanding of legal concepts and like to discuss legal matters informally.
Yes, only if mail addressed to 'that' someone else keeps being delivered to "your" address.
Yes, you can be sued for slander in a private email if the contents of the email are defamatory and cause harm to someone's reputation. Slander involves making false and damaging statements about someone to a third party, and this can include private communications such as emails. If the recipient of the email shares it with others or if it somehow becomes public, the person mentioned in the email could potentially take legal action for slander.
Yes, it's not super personal like Street Adresses, phone numbers, social security numbers and such