The House of Commons engaged in an extensive debate on privacy  yesterday in response to an NDP motion that would require the  government to disclose the number of warrantless disclosures made by  telecom companies. I’ll have more on the debate shortly (it’s worth  reading), but the government has made it clear that it will not be  supporting the motion.
      My weekly technology law column (Toronto Star version, homepage version) notes that the revelations of massive telecom and Internet provider  disclosures of subscriber information generated a political firestorm  with pointed questions to Prime Minister Stephen Harper in the House of  Commons about how the government and law enforcement agencies could file  more than a million requests for Canadian subscriber information in a  single year.
   The shocking numbers come directly from the telecom industry after years  of keeping their disclosure practices shielded from public view. They  reveal that Canadian telecom and Internet providers are asked to  disclose basic subscriber information every 27 seconds. In 2011, that  added up to 1,193,630 requests, the majority of which were not  accompanied by a warrant or court order. The data indicates that telecom  and Internet providers gave the government what it wanted – three  providers alone disclosed information from 785,000 customer accounts.
   The issue is likely to continue to attract attention, particularly since  the government is seeking to expand the warrantless disclosure  framework in Bill C-13 (the lawful access bill) and Bill S-4 (the  Digital Privacy Act). 
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