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Look up disclosure in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. This page outlines various uses of the term "disclosure." For a discussion of the philosophical concept of disclosure, which has a significantly different meaning, see the Wikipedia article on world disclosure. Disclosure means the giving out of information, either voluntarily or to be in compliance with legal regulations or workplace rules. Contents 1 Information 2 Politics 3 Arts and media 4 See also // Information In computer security, full disclosure means disclosing full information about vulnerabilities In computing, disclosure widget In journalism, full disclosure (media) refers to disclosing the interests of the writer which may bear on the subject being written about, for example, if the writer has worked with an interview subject in the past In psychology, disclosure refers to talking to others about one's feelings In law: The law of England and Wales, disclosure refers to a process that may form part of legal proceedings, whereby parties inform ("disclose") to other parties the existence of any relevant documents that are, or have been, in their control. This compares with the process known as discovery in the course of legal proceedings in the United States In U.S. civil procedure (litigation rules for civil cases), disclosure is a stage prior to trial. In civil cases, each party must disclose to the opposing party the following: names of witnesses which it may use to support its side, copies of documents (or mere description of these documents) in its control which it may use to support its side, computation of damages claimed, and certain insurance information. Disclosure is related to, but technically prior to, the discovery stage. In company law (known as "corporate law" in the United States), disclosure refers to giving out information about public or limited companies or their officers, which might be kept secret if the company was a privately held company or a partnership Key disclosure laws may require individuals using cryptographic software to disclose encryption keys or decrypt data to satisfy law enforcement needs. In real property transactions, disclosure refers to providing to a buyer information known to the seller or broker/agent concerning the condition or other aspects of real property that would affect the property's value or desirability. These rules regarding what information must be disclosed, and whether the information must be disclosed even if a buyer does not ask, vary from one jurisdiction to the next. In accounting, disclosure refers to a company's disseminating information about its past financial performance, future forecasts, current operations, and anything else investors may be interested in. In the United States, such disclosure for most public firms is regulated by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Politics The Disclosure Project, an organization lobbying the U.S. government to disclose its information on UFOs Arts and media Disclosure (novel), a 1994 novel written by Michael Crichton Disclosure (film), a 1994 film starring Michael Douglas and Demi Moore, based on the Crichton novel CBC News: Disclosure, a television newsmagazine series in Canada "Disclosure (Stargate SG-1)", a Season 6 episode of Stargate SG-1 See also Full disclosure (disambiguation) Early case assessment Ufology This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Note: This page may need to be cleaned up to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Further information might be found on the talk page.