Echognome, on Jul 18 2007, 08:53 PM, said:
helene_t, on Jul 18 2007, 10:34 AM, said:
I don't believe the part of the EBU regulation stating that you must not act upon it is controversial. The controversial part is that you must not disclose it.
But my point was that because you don't act upon it (whether that's because it would be unethical or whether it's because it would destroy partnership trust) you don't need to disclose it. Like you don't alert a potential psyche if you have no psych-control mechanism, yet if you do it's not a psyche anymore but a convention and then you do alert it.
Not that I necesarily agree with this kind of reasoning, just trying to reconstruct the thinking of those who made the laws.