Citbank says that since the attacks began a few months ago, it hasn't registered a single case of somebody divulging their information. |
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Also, be careful about divulging personal information in news group chatting. |
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Sometimes managers feel uneasy about divulging certain information to their people. |
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I couldn't go divulging that information, when Eva had told me in confidence. |
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I don't know if this would be divulging a trade secret or anything, but what is your overall success rate? |
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However, the health board has been criticised by anti-abortion campaigners for not divulging information about the case. |
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Well, nobody's comfortable at first blush with the notion of not divulging everything. |
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It explains the kinds of tactics interrogators are likely to use to coerce you into confessing or divulging information. |
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Never divulging his sexual orientation to his attending doctors, he was diagnosed with a form of Lane disease when in fact he was seroconverting. |
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If there are delicate negotiations going on, and divulging information may jeopardize these, one might understand. |
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I didn't know this, and I'm considering legal action against Beth for not divulging that information. |
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He has been in jail ever since, with additional charges of divulging state secrets to British intelligence. |
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Although some villains were rejected, the M.E.N. probe found many were given the go-ahead despite divulging a string of convictions. |
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If you took a truth drug, what would you be worried about divulging? |
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Think twice before divulging your number to a business you don't believe has a real need for it. |
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The prosecutors waste no time divulging these exculpatory facts to the man's lawyers. |
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Nor would I be divulging a secret if I said there are proposals for a return to a classic amending treaty. |
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This allows individual clients to sign in for services without divulging personal identifying information. |
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Participants in both groups acknowledged that Internet users must bear some responsibility for divulging their addresses too readily. |
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There was also a confidentiality clause which prohibited Berthiaume from divulging information about any of the firm's clients. |
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The chat conversation could be as highly encrypted as possible, yet the divulging of private information could still occur. |
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Some doctors are accused of divulging to employers confidential information that violates the privacy of HIV-positive patients. |
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Once, at a party in the mid-1980s, I asked Gracie Mansion, the Manhattan gallerist, if she would mind divulging her given name. |
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Experts believe the goal of the hijacking was to fool users into divulging personal financial data such as credit card numbers and account usernames and passwords. |
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Anne turned after divulging her information and went back to the story. |
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In the federal context, the restrictions on divulging information and the requirement to disclose information pursuant to the Access to Information Act and Privacy Act must be complied with. |
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A Harvard freshman who runs the website Think Secret stands accused of seducing Apple employees into breaking their confidentiality agreements and divulging interesting titbits. |
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Phishing schemes are designed to look real to trick users into divulging personal information for the purpose of financial fraud or identity theft. |
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Contacting you by phone or leaving voice messages directing you to contact a phony call centre that attempts to trick you into divulging personal information. |
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Fraudsters use telephone technology to make it look like they are calling from a legitimate company and to try to trick you into divulging personal or financial information. |
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He therefore wanted to keep the reference to verbal communication, as that method of divulging inventions was considered as particularly important especially by the European Patent Office. |
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The staffer hesitates before divulging this potentially sensitive information. At Mr Obama's campaign office in the same town, the welcome is warmer: a seat, a cup of coffee and a list of local Obama-ites to call. |
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Detainees' parents or guardians and lawyers could be detained for up to five years for divulging any information regarding the fact or nature of detention. |
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For example, there will often be no harm in divulging information about a completed investigation, particularly if the fact of and circumstances relating to it are already in the public domain. |
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But without evidence of abuse, we respect the Service's position that the full story cannot be told without divulging information of significant intelligence value. |
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I would ask her, though, this question: does she not see the danger of divulging to somebody who is actually guilty the source and nature of the evidence against him or her? |
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A type of confidence trick, social engineering is the use of deceit to manipulate or trick victims into certain actions including divulging personal or financial information. |
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