The fact you were told to put it in a particular spot doesn't make the workplace responsible for the loss of your bike. Let's look at another way. If you parked your bike in front of a store and it is stolen the store is not responsible for the loss of your bike. There are many factors involved that may have allowed the person to steal the bike. It is possible your lock was faulty, not locked correctly, not locked to a solid object or one that can't be moved, the chain wasn't enough to stop it from being cut, or any other factor. To prove your workplace At Fault would take proving that all of the above was in place and correct. Since you work there you also have to consider the factor that it could cause problems for future employment with the company. Count it as a learning experience and move on.
permission rights stolen byhackers
No. It will always remain stolen.
If something is stolen, you probably won't just 'find' it again. If you are certain it was stolen, then you need to tell someone, either a teacher (if you're at school), or a policeman.
You have the right to file a police report about your stolen money.
Aboriginal Land Rights happened because there was an appeal from the post stolen generation. Land Rights were and are important so the White Australian's can start to "rite the wrongs".
Because someone might have stolen your position in a certain subject.
One way to protect your ideas from being stolen is to file for a patent, which gives you legal rights to your invention and prevents others from using it without your permission.
with a pencil?
Workplace reports on stolen goods need to include the name of the individual writing the report, the item that was stolen, the date it went missing, and notes on the incident. Included notes should be thorough, including the time you noticed it missing, the value of the item, a description of the item, and the location where the item was last seen.
The risk you run in this situation is that the owner will report the car stolen. The owner would be within their rights to assume the car was stolen and proceed as such.
You need to read your home policy or just call your agent. It depends on what was stolen and how much. Your home policy typically covers up to a certain limit on your home policy.
I don't think they are stolen; rather they are like socks in the dryer. They tend to connect to other pieces of paper than the one intended. In every place I have ever worked, there are large caches of excess clips. If you are running short, check with the people you send clipped pages to--chances they have plenty to share. In fact, paper clips come and go. You send some and another person will send you also clipped papers. I think of paper clips as coins, they move around, give some, receive some. I haven't bought paper clips for my office in over 15 years. I get them from my bank for free. Almost every deposit they get has a paper clip attached and they are happy to save them and have them recycled.