0 present participle of intercept --
1 to stop and catch something or someone before that thing or person is able to reach a particular place: --
I want to emphasise that this provision does not provide a loophole for intercepting agencies to have permanent access to material.
There is no statutory authority for intercepting telephone messages or for eavesdropping on telephone messages.
How do we stop such people intercepting in that way?
The decision states that there is no longer any doubt about the existence of a worldwide system for intercepting communications.
Human intelligence—infiltrating and recruiting—and signal intelligence in intercepting communications will be of huge importance.
I may, however, state that it is sometimes used for the purpose of intercepting grossly indecent literature and lottery circulars coming from abroad.
Clearly demons may be defined for intercepting a wide spectrum of semantic events, and one could argue that this capability should be given to the user.
Besides intercepting something, the new tasks expected from users seem to be based on their capability of sharing and forming something which no longer seems to be given: the meaning.