Scottish Bill incriminates Explicit Communication

24 06 2008

Scottish mobile users may be in jeopardy for incrimination, due to their violation of the Sexual Offences Bill. The Scottish residents are being tried for illicit communications through text messages and emails, with the use of their mobile broadband. The new legislation commenced by the Scottish government will result in strong penalties for those who were incriminated. If sexual messages were regarded as humiliation for the recipient, the communication is considered as an illegal offence.

The recent bill is an uncompromised revision as part of the sex crime legislation which exists across Scotland. The bill requires that those who violate the laws face large penalization, facing up to ten years of hard jail time. The legislation’s purpose is to create a legal framework to oppose sexual crimes. The bill will become iffy as to its criticality. Deciding at which point flirting becomes criminal activity. It will most likely cause a remorse for those who commit such activity, most of which consist of male users.

The court considers any such message as one which causes a resulting emotional feeling to the recipient. Any unsolicited message which is designed to release sexual gratification, humiliation, or distress, can be deemed as unethical; resulting in criminal investigation of the issue. The new legislation also ceases the deployment of pornographic material between subscribers, whether or not the recipients wish to receive it.

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