TY - BOOK AU - Oro, Marinel D. TI - No privacy in facebook : : reanalysis of Vivares v. STC case and its implication PY - 2016/// CY - Cebu City PB - University of Cebu N1 - Thesis (Degree of Juris Doctor) -- University of Cebu-Banilad, 2016; Includes bibliographical references (leaves 41-47) N2 - Summary: Legal discipline has always had implications in a man's social life. The legal concept such as Privacy is an integral part of a man's social activities. It is his right to be left alone. One aspect of privacy revolves around a man's ability to determine when and how others may collect and use his information. It is the type of privacy central to the landmark case of Vivares v. STC where the court ruled to deny the grant of the writ of habeas data on the premise that there was no invasion of privacy conducted by the defendant. This ruling, being the first of its kind, was the subject of re-examination by this study to extract essential informational privacy doctrines and discuss their implications on issues of access, regulation and evidentiary use of private matters. The researchers used document-analysis of related laws, jurisprudence and legal concepts from local sources as well as those from the United States, where the concept of privacy originated. The researchers found that the Court's pronouncement created a restrictive view of privacy to the point of declaring, "There is no reasonable expectation of privacy in Facebook." Consequently, it circumvented the rule in content data access. In the same vein, it promotes privacy self-management. It also opens up the possibility of use of evidence procured via social media ER -