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ARWadsworth September 4th 05 11:57 PM

OT Keystoke Logger-The result
 
The lodger has left.

I stuck a cheap camera in the computer room and connected it to the VCR in
my bedroom. After recording her in the computer room going through all the
desk drawers and paper files I then moved the camera to my bedroom and
recorded her looking through all drawers, cupboards and wardrobes.

I gave her 3 hours notice to leave. The bond I have will cover cost of the
change of door locks.

Adam



Colin Wilson September 5th 05 12:02 AM

The lodger has left.
I gave her 3 hours notice to leave. The bond I have will cover cost of the
change of door locks.


Congrats !

What was her response when you told her what you`d done ?

--
Please add the word "newsgroup" in the subject line of personal emails
**** My email address includes "ngspamtrap" and " ****

ARWadsworth September 5th 05 12:32 AM


"Colin Wilson" wrote in message
t...
The lodger has left.
I gave her 3 hours notice to leave. The bond I have will cover cost of
the
change of door locks.


Congrats !

What was her response when you told her what you`d done ?


Silence. She walked out leaving all her stuff and has gone to stop at her
friends house.

Adam



Mungo \two sheds\ Toadfoot September 5th 05 08:46 AM

ARWadsworth wrote:
"Colin Wilson" wrote in message
t...
The lodger has left.
I gave her 3 hours notice to leave. The bond I have will cover cost
of the
change of door locks.


Congrats !

What was her response when you told her what you`d done ?


Silence. She walked out leaving all her stuff and has gone to stop at
her friends house.


She'll try to have you for invasion of privacy and illegal monitoring, you
wait and see :)

Si



s--p--o--n--i--x September 5th 05 09:39 AM

On Mon, 5 Sep 2005 08:46:22 +0100, "Mungo \"two sheds\" Toadfoot"
wrote:

She'll try to have you for invasion of privacy and illegal monitoring, you
wait and see :)


Surely "the camera was there to ensure the safety of the tenants"?

If she were to complain the landlord could merely point out all the
valuable and rare objects that he'd had stolen over the previous few
months....the tenant would have to prove it wasn't them that was
taking the stuff...

Give the ex-tenant 2 weeks in writing to remove her stuff. Once the
two weeks have passed you can dispose of it how you like.

sponix

Mr Fizzion September 5th 05 11:22 AM

On Sun, 04 Sep 2005 22:57:56 GMT, "ARWadsworth"
wrote:

The lodger has left.

I stuck a cheap camera in the computer room and connected it to the VCR in
my bedroom. After recording her in the computer room going through all the
desk drawers and paper files I then moved the camera to my bedroom and
recorded her looking through all drawers, cupboards and wardrobes.

I gave her 3 hours notice to leave. The bond I have will cover cost of the
change of door locks.

Adam


Well done! I first read "moved the camera to her bedroom". I'm
becoming an old pervert :-). Might have been fun though!!

I wonder what she was looking for...did you ask her?

Mr F.


Ed Sirett September 5th 05 12:25 PM

On Mon, 05 Sep 2005 11:22:14 +0100, Mr Fizzion wrote:

On Sun, 04 Sep 2005 22:57:56 GMT, "ARWadsworth"
wrote:

The lodger has left.

I stuck a cheap camera in the computer room and connected it to the VCR in
my bedroom. After recording her in the computer room going through all the
desk drawers and paper files I then moved the camera to my bedroom and
recorded her looking through all drawers, cupboards and wardrobes.

I gave her 3 hours notice to leave. The bond I have will cover cost of the
change of door locks.

Adam


Well done! I first read "moved the camera to her bedroom". I'm
becoming an old pervert :-). Might have been fun though!!

I wonder what she was looking for...did you ask her?

ISTR there was a case like that a few back. Where the Landlord decided to
monitor the tenants bedroom activities with a CCTV camera.

I think the whole matter came to court and the Judge (obviously) deemed
that the tenants had not recieved 'the quite enjoyment of the flat'. The
pervy Landlord was ordered to pay a large sum to the tenants in
compensation. IIRC comparable with the rent received during the tenancy.



--
Ed Sirett - Property maintainer and registered gas fitter.
The FAQ for uk.diy is at http://www.diyfaq.org.uk
Gas fitting FAQ http://www.makewrite.demon.co.uk/GasFitting.html
Sealed CH FAQ http://www.makewrite.demon.co.uk/SealedCH.html



The Natural Philosopher September 5th 05 02:22 PM

Ed Sirett wrote:
On Mon, 05 Sep 2005 11:22:14 +0100, Mr Fizzion wrote:


On Sun, 04 Sep 2005 22:57:56 GMT, "ARWadsworth"
wrote:


The lodger has left.

I stuck a cheap camera in the computer room and connected it to the VCR in
my bedroom. After recording her in the computer room going through all the
desk drawers and paper files I then moved the camera to my bedroom and
recorded her looking through all drawers, cupboards and wardrobes.

I gave her 3 hours notice to leave. The bond I have will cover cost of the
change of door locks.

Adam


Well done! I first read "moved the camera to her bedroom". I'm
becoming an old pervert :-). Might have been fun though!!

I wonder what she was looking for...did you ask her?


ISTR there was a case like that a few back. Where the Landlord decided to
monitor the tenants bedroom activities with a CCTV camera.

I think the whole matter came to court and the Judge (obviously) deemed
that the tenants had not recieved 'the quite enjoyment of the flat'. The
pervy Landlord was ordered to pay a large sum to the tenants in
compensation. IIRC comparable with the rent received during the tenancy.



The laws relating to lodgers are quite different from those relating to
rented accomodation where the tenant is in sole possession.

Yiu can't just sling someone out of rented acc. but you can sling a
lodger out.

Alex September 5th 05 04:02 PM

s--p--o--n--i--x wrote:
She'll try to have you for invasion of privacy and illegal monitoring, you
wait and see :)



Surely "the camera was there to ensure the safety of the tenants"?


But the DPA requires that CCTV usage is signposted "Images are being
recorded for the detection of crime blah blah"... Don't know if this is
required in this situation?

If she were to complain the landlord could merely point out all the
valuable and rare objects that he'd had stolen over the previous few
months....the tenant would have to prove it wasn't them that was
taking the stuff...


No, innocent until proven guilty.

alex.

Aidan September 5th 05 04:26 PM


Alex wrote:

But the DPA requires that CCTV usage is signposted "Images are being


The most relevant bit is; "...I then moved the camera to my
bedroom...". The lodger wasn't invited into the OP's bedroom & if he
wants cameras in his bedroom, that's his business.


s--p--o--n--i--x September 5th 05 04:33 PM

On Mon, 05 Sep 2005 16:02:28 +0100, Alex
wrote:

s--p--o--n--i--x wrote:


If she were to complain the landlord could merely point out all the
valuable and rare objects that he'd had stolen over the previous few
months....the tenant would have to prove it wasn't them that was
taking the stuff...


No, innocent until proven guilty.


But..if she believes stuff has been stolen she'll obviously assume
she'd be prime suspect in any subsequent Police investigation!

She'd therefore be unlikely to kick up a fuss as the last thing she'd
want is to be dragged in for questioning whether guilty or not.

sponix

Christian McArdle September 5th 05 05:35 PM

She'll try to have you for invasion of privacy and illegal monitoring, you
wait and see :)


Surely you can monitor your own bedroom?

Christian.



Bob Eager September 5th 05 05:46 PM

On Mon, 5 Sep 2005 16:35:57 UTC, "Christian McArdle"
wrote:

She'll try to have you for invasion of privacy and illegal monitoring, you
wait and see :)


Surely you can monitor your own bedroom?


And he always has the defence that he is in fact a perve, and likes to
have a camera in his bedroom...it's her fault she was noticed by it!

--
The information contained in this post is copyright the
poster, and specifically may not be published in, or used by
http://laminateflooring.oncloud8.com

Mr F September 5th 05 06:17 PM

On Mon, 5 Sep 2005 17:35:57 +0100, "Christian McArdle"
wrote:

She'll try to have you for invasion of privacy and illegal monitoring, you
wait and see :)


Surely you can monitor your own bedroom?

Christian.


Depends who else is sleeping there and if they know! :-)

Mr F.



DJC September 5th 05 06:54 PM

Christian McArdle wrote:
She'll try to have you for invasion of privacy and illegal monitoring, you
wait and see :)



Surely you can monitor your own bedroom?


More important surely is that she was invading his privacy in the first
place.


--
David Clark

$message_body_include ="PLES RING IF AN RNSR IS REQIRD"

ARWadsworth September 5th 05 06:56 PM


"s--p--o--n--i--x" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 5 Sep 2005 08:46:22 +0100, "Mungo \"two sheds\" Toadfoot"
wrote:

She'll try to have you for invasion of privacy and illegal monitoring, you
wait and see :)


Surely "the camera was there to ensure the safety of the tenants"?

If she were to complain the landlord could merely point out all the
valuable and rare objects that he'd had stolen over the previous few
months....the tenant would have to prove it wasn't them that was
taking the stuff...

Give the ex-tenant 2 weeks in writing to remove her stuff. Once the
two weeks have passed you can dispose of it how you like.


I have no idea where her friend lives so I cannot write to her. I suppose
some pervert may buy her knickers on eBay (I do belive that used ones are
worth more according to my spam trap folder). I could keep the mobile
phones, laptop, DVD player, DVDs, TV and the X-Box that she has left.

Adam



ARWadsworth September 5th 05 07:00 PM


"Mr F" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 5 Sep 2005 17:35:57 +0100, "Christian McArdle"
wrote:

She'll try to have you for invasion of privacy and illegal monitoring,
you
wait and see :)


Surely you can monitor your own bedroom?

Christian.


Depends who else is sleeping there and if they know! :-)

Not sleeping but snooping.

Adam



Bob Eager September 5th 05 07:00 PM

On Mon, 5 Sep 2005 17:56:57 UTC, "ARWadsworth"
wrote:

I have no idea where her friend lives so I cannot write to her. I suppose
some pervert may buy her knickers on eBay (I do belive that used ones are
worth more according to my spam trap folder).


If there are any that aren't used, wear them for a day...!

--
The information contained in this post is copyright the
poster, and specifically may not be published in, or used by
http://laminateflooring.oncloud8.com

Cicero September 5th 05 08:28 PM


"ARWadsworth" wrote in message
.uk...

"s--p--o--n--i--x" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 5 Sep 2005 08:46:22 +0100, "Mungo \"two sheds\" Toadfoot"
wrote:

snip
I have no idea where her friend lives so I cannot write to her. I suppose
some pervert may buy her knickers on eBay (I do belive that used ones are
worth more according to my spam trap folder). I could keep the mobile
phones, laptop, DVD player, DVDs, TV and the X-Box that she has left.

Adam


==================
Just a thought.....

In view of the lady's peculiar habits it's possible that the items you've
listed were stolen by her. It might be worth reporting the facts to the
police to ensure that you're not caught in possession of stolen property.

Cic.




ARWadsworth September 5th 05 09:28 PM


"Cicero" wrote in message
...

"ARWadsworth" wrote in message
.uk...

"s--p--o--n--i--x" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 5 Sep 2005 08:46:22 +0100, "Mungo \"two sheds\" Toadfoot"
wrote:

snip
I have no idea where her friend lives so I cannot write to her. I suppose
some pervert may buy her knickers on eBay (I do belive that used ones are
worth more according to my spam trap folder). I could keep the mobile
phones, laptop, DVD player, DVDs, TV and the X-Box that she has left.

Adam


==================
Just a thought.....

In view of the lady's peculiar habits it's possible that the items you've
listed were stolen by her. It might be worth reporting the facts to the
police to ensure that you're not caught in possession of stolen property.

Cic.


A good point.

Thank you.

Adam



David McNeish September 5th 05 09:28 PM

In article ,
says...

But the DPA requires that CCTV usage is signposted "Images are being
recorded for the detection of crime blah blah"... Don't know if this is
required in this situation?


No, data processed only for personal, family or household affairs are
exempt from the DPA.

David

Bob Eager September 5th 05 09:44 PM

On Mon, 5 Sep 2005 15:02:28 UTC, Alex wrote:

But the DPA requires that CCTV usage is signposted "Images are being
recorded for the detection of crime blah blah"... Don't know if this is
required in this situation?


No, it isn't. Such use doesn't even come under the DPA.

http://www.informationcommissioner.gov.uk/eventual.aspx?pg=SR&cID=5740

--
The information contained in this post is copyright the
poster, and specifically may not be published in, or used by
http://laminateflooring.oncloud8.com

ARWadsworth September 5th 05 10:53 PM


"Mr Fizzion" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 04 Sep 2005 22:57:56 GMT, "ARWadsworth"
wrote:

The lodger has left.

I stuck a cheap camera in the computer room and connected it to the VCR in
my bedroom. After recording her in the computer room going through all the
desk drawers and paper files I then moved the camera to my bedroom and
recorded her looking through all drawers, cupboards and wardrobes.

I gave her 3 hours notice to leave. The bond I have will cover cost of the
change of door locks.

Adam


Well done! I first read "moved the camera to her bedroom". I'm
becoming an old pervert :-). Might have been fun though!!

I wonder what she was looking for...did you ask her?


She just walked out saying nothing.

Adam



ARWadsworth September 5th 05 10:59 PM


"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message
...
Ed Sirett wrote:
On Mon, 05 Sep 2005 11:22:14 +0100, Mr Fizzion wrote:


On Sun, 04 Sep 2005 22:57:56 GMT, "ARWadsworth"
wrote:


The lodger has left.

I stuck a cheap camera in the computer room and connected it to the VCR
in my bedroom. After recording her in the computer room going through
all the desk drawers and paper files I then moved the camera to my
bedroom and recorded her looking through all drawers, cupboards and
wardrobes.

I gave her 3 hours notice to leave. The bond I have will cover cost of
the change of door locks.

Adam

Well done! I first read "moved the camera to her bedroom". I'm
becoming an old pervert :-). Might have been fun though!!

I wonder what she was looking for...did you ask her?


ISTR there was a case like that a few back. Where the Landlord decided to
monitor the tenants bedroom activities with a CCTV camera. I think the
whole matter came to court and the Judge (obviously) deemed
that the tenants had not recieved 'the quite enjoyment of the flat'. The
pervy Landlord was ordered to pay a large sum to the tenants in
compensation. IIRC comparable with the rent received during the tenancy.

The laws relating to lodgers are quite different from those relating to
rented accomodation where the tenant is in sole possession.

Yiu can't just sling someone out of rented acc. but you can sling a lodger
out.


There was no contract other than a verbal one so no problem in slinging her
out. I suppose another one will turn up. They frequently do. It is just that
she was the first to take the ****.

Adam




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