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| | G '''Purpose''' || style="text-align:left;" | Documentation   | | G '''Purpose''' || style="text-align:left;" | Documentation   | ||
| |} | |} | ||
| ==From the explanatory report== | |||
| ''Contemporaneous notes'' are admissible in civil proceedings (in the U.S.) as  | |||
| evidence of the facts of a conversation, observation, or interaction between  | |||
| individuals. This was made known to the world in 2017 by then-FBI Director  | |||
| James Comey, who compiled them from his personal conversations with the  | |||
| then-President.<ref name="COMEY-NOTES" /> | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | |||
| <div class="mw-collapsible-content"><div class="res-img"><span id="COMEY-NOTES-PAGE1"> | |||
| [[File:Comey-Notes.170107.EN.page-1.png]] | |||
| </span> | |||
| </div> | |||
| </div> | |||
| </div> | |||
| <br/> | |||
| Contemporaneous notes created by a person themselves create a store of conceivable evidence, until there is a claim their creator is using them to refute or prove. In 2010, then Google Chairman Eric Schmidt:<ref name="PRIVACY" /> | |||
| <blockquote> | |||
| If you have something that you don't want anyone to know, maybe you | |||
| shouldn't be doing it in the first place. | |||
| </blockquote> | |||
| ==Sources== | |||
| <references> | |||
| <ref name="PRIVACY">»The Google CEO on Privacy«, huffingtonpost.com, March 18, 2010</ref> | |||
| <ref name="COMEY-NOTES">Associated Press, »Memos drafted by former FBI Director James Comey  | |||
| detailing his interactions with President Donald Trump«, documentcloud.org, 2018, page 1</ref> | |||
| </references> | |||
| [[Category:Collection]] | [[Category:Collection]] | ||
