additional data definition
additional data means the data stored in SIS and connected with SIS alerts which are to be immediately available to the competent authorities where a person in respect of whom data has been entered in SIS is located as a result of searches made therein;
additional data means the data stored in SIS II and connected with SIS II alerts which are to be immediately available to the competent authorities where a person in respect of whom data has been entered in SIS II is located as a result of searches made therein;
additional data means any data or information associated with the Original Material or Banked Material, which has been generated within the EBiSC Project or reported or disclosed by any party to the EBE or the EBiSC Bank, and which is neither Original Data nor Managed Data;
Examples of additional data in a sentence
FAR 52.227-16 Additional Data Requirements (JUN 1987) Does not apply if Agreement is with a university or college for an amount of $500,000 or less.
More Definitions of additional data
additional data means any information, data, reports or other material relating to the Work or the Place of the Work, other than the Information Documents, provided to the Contractor from time to time by the Owner or the Engineer.
additional data means the data stored in the SIS II and connected to SIS II alerts which shall be immediately available to the competent authorities where persons in respect of whom data has been entered in the SIS II are found as a result of searches made therein;
additional data means additional data within Canada, unless otherwise specified in a Rate Plan,
additional data means any Personal Data supplied by you, or supplied by and/or generated by your Users, in addition to User Data.
additional data means the data stored in the SIS II and connected to SIS II alerts which is necessary for allowing the competent authorities to take the appropriate action;
additional data means any Personal Data supplied by you, or supplied by and/or
additional data component means that the integrity is provided not just over the encrypted portions of the message but some additional unencrypted data. For example, if Alice wants to send a message to Bob, she may want to include that the message is ”From Alice to Bob” in plaintext (for the benefit of the system that routes the message from Alice to Bob) but also include it in the set of data protected by the authentication.