Home

sledovanie

Sledovanie is a term used in several Slavic languages, including Slovak, Czech (sledování), Polish (śledzenie), and Russian transliteration sledovanie, to denote tracking, monitoring, surveillance, or investigation. The word derives from a root meaning to follow or trace, reflecting its core idea of following information, events, or people over time.

In everyday use, sledovanie can describe monitoring of processes or systems (for example environmental monitoring, laboratory

Technologies involved in sledovanie include sensors, cameras, network monitoring, data logging, and analytics. Methods range from

Ethical and legal considerations are central: data protection laws, consent, purpose limitation, data minimization, and retention

experiments,
or
industrial
telemetry)
as
well
as
investigative
or
surveillance
activity
in
police,
intelligence,
or
journalism
contexts.
In
law
and
public
life,
the
term
often
carries
connotations
of
formal
observation,
sometimes
under
legal
authority,
and
may
raise
privacy
and
civil
liberties
questions.
The
sense
of
the
term
can
vary
by
country
and
legal
framework.
passive
data
collection
to
active
tracing
of
movement
or
behavior.
The
term
can
also
apply
to
scientific
observation,
where
researchers
track
variables
and
outcomes
over
time,
or
to
media
and
consumer
contexts
where
attention
and
activity
are
followed
for
analysis.
periods
shape
how
sledovanie
is
conducted.
In
the
European
Union
and
many
other
jurisdictions,
surveillance
and
monitoring
are
regulated
to
balance
security,
safety,
and
privacy,
with
ongoing
debates
about
scope,
transparency,
and
accountability.