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My Globe and Mail op-ed opens by noting that after years of dismissing the warnings of likely retaliation, the Canadian ...
The Bill C-2 lawful access focus has thus far primarily centred on the creation of a new warrantless information demand power ...
After years of dismissing the warnings of likely retaliation, the Canadian government caved last night on the digital services tax. Faced with the prospect of the U.S. suspending trade negotiations, ...
U.S. President Donald Trump announced yesterday that he was suspending trade negotiations with Canada due to the imminent ...
The government’s inclusion of warrantless information demand powers in Bill C-2 has attracted mounting concern, particularly the stunning decision to target everyone who provides services in Canada ...
The government’s unexpected privacy reform agenda includes both lawful access in Bill C-2 and the evisceration of political ...
Earlier this week, I wrote about how the government’s inclusion of warrantless information demand powers in Bill C-2 may make this the most dangerous lawful access proposal yet, exceeding even the ...
The Department of Justice has released its Charter Statement for Bill C-4, the affordability measures bill that also exempts political parties from the application of privacy protections on a ...
The problem is that the information demand power in Bill C-2 is not limited to telecom service providers. The bill includes a definition for an “electronic service provider” and a “core provider” but ...
This has to change. The government is seeking to build on political party exemptions for telemarketing and email marketing by removing the privacy safeguards commonly applied to millions of Canadian ...
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