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You Can’t Put the Toothpaste Back in the Tube: Why the Government’s Reported “Temporary” Plan for a Kids’ Social Media Ban Would Mean Mandated ID for Everyone
The Law Bytes Podcast, Episode 271: Taking Stock of a Wild Week in Canadian Digital Policy With the Online Streaming Reversal, AI Strategy Release, and Lawful Access Review
Canadian American Business Council on Bill C-22: It “Threatens Our Bilateral Partnership on Data Security”
AI for All, Details to Follow: Government Releases a Big-Spending AI Strategy That Is Still Short on the Specifics That Matter
New Privacy Rights in the Morning, Mandatory Metadata Retention in the Afternoon: How Bill C-22 Undercuts the AI Strategy Before It Launches
Michael Geist
mgeist@uottawa.ca
This web site is licensed under a Creative Commons License, although certain works referenced herein may be separately licensed.
Maybe hoping it will all just go away?
If Canada chooses not to sign ACTA, there wouldn’t be any need for public briefings.
We are following the Aussies?
We are following the great firewall of oz people about internet rights? That’s what we’re doing? We used to be as free as Germany, especially internet wise. We should aim for that. It’s facilitation of peer to peer communication, and our formerly progressive copyright laws have made a noticeable difference in our political life from 2002-now than pre 2002 ( 2001 is when I began to care greatly about politics )