<Li> Kaye v Robertson </Li> <Li> Wainwright v Home Office </Li> <P> The right to privacy is not explicitly stated anywhere in the Bill of Rights . The idea of a right to privacy was first addressed within a legal context in the United States . Louis Brandeis (later a Supreme Court justice) and another young lawyer, Samuel D. Warren, published an article called "The Right to Privacy" in the Harvard Law Review in 1890 arguing that the United States Constitution and common law allowed for the deduction of a general "right to privacy". </P> <P> Their project was never entirely successful, and the renowned tort expert and Dean of the College of Law at University of California, Berkeley, William Lloyd Prosser argued that "privacy" was composed of four separate torts, the only unifying element of which was a (vague) "right to be left alone". The four torts were: </P>

Which provisions of the bill of rights directly or indirectly protect a right to privacy
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