> steal
> pirate
> leak
> plagiarise
> breach
> mirror
> clone
> replicate
> image
> intercept
> disseminate
> breach
> transgress
> microfilm
> xerox
> exfiltrate
> decrypt
> expose
> disclose
> compromise
> extract
> copy
> pinch
> crib
> abstract
>
would 'to pry' work?
First of all, thank you to everybody who replied, both on and off-list.
On 07/01/2020 12:38, ao402...@gmail.com wrote:
[..]
To abstract the object.
I had independently come up with that word - but ao402468 published
first. Darn, but not liver-gnawing time :)
Words people have come up with:
On 20-01-07 02:52:29, Peter Fairbrother wrote:
> to mean stolen from a record but still in it, ie integrity and availability
> are preserved but not confidentiality.
>
> "Stolen" is too laced with implications of the stolen object not being there
> any more, "copied" does not imply the theft aspec
On 01/06/2020 07:52 PM, Peter Fairbrother wrote:
> to mean stolen from a record but still in it, ie integrity and
> availability are preserved but not confidentiality.
>
> "Stolen" is too laced with implications of the stolen object not being
> there any more, "copied" does not imply the theft asp
On Tue, Jan 07, 2020 at 02:52:29AM +, Peter Fairbrother wrote:
> to mean stolen from a record but still in it, ie integrity and availability
> are preserved but not confidentiality.
>
> "Stolen" is too laced with implications of the stolen object not being there
> any more, "copied" does not i
‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Tuesday, January 7, 2020 2:52 AM, Peter Fairbrother wrote:
> to mean stolen from a record but still in it, ie integrity and
> availability are preserved but not confidentiality.
>
> "Stolen" is too laced with implications of the stolen object not being
> ther
On 1/6/20 20:52, Peter Fairbrother wrote:
> to mean stolen from a record but still in it, ie integrity and
> availability are preserved but not confidentiality.
>
> "Stolen" is too laced with implications of the stolen object not being
> there any more, "copied" does not imply the theft aspect eno
On 1/6/20 6:52 PM, Peter Fairbrother wrote:
> to mean stolen from a record but still in it, ie integrity and
> availability are preserved but not confidentiality.
>
> "Stolen" is too laced with implications of the stolen object not being
> there any more, "copied" does not imply the theft aspect e
to mean stolen from a record but still in it, ie integrity and
availability are preserved but not confidentiality.
"Stolen" is too laced with implications of the stolen object not being
there any more, "copied" does not imply the theft aspect enough,
"pirated" is too silly.
Any other sugges