Every 27 seconds. Minute after minute, hour after hour, day after day,  week after week, month after month. Canadian telecommunications  providers, who collect massive amounts of data about their subscribers,  are asked to disclose basic subscriber information to Canadian law  enforcement agencies every 27 seconds. In 2011, that added up to  1,193,630 requests. Given the volume, most likely do not involve a  warrant or court oversight (2010 RCMP data showed 94% of requests  involving customer name and address information was provided voluntarily  without a warrant). 
 In most warrantless cases, the telecommunications companies were  entitled to say no. The law says that telecom companies and Internet  providers may disclose personal information without a warrant as part of  a lawful investigation or they can withhold the information until law  enforcement has obtained a warrant. According to newly released  information, three telecom providers alone disclosed information from  785,000 customer accounts in 2011, suggesting that the actual totals  were much higher. Moreover, virtually all providers sought compensation  for complying with the requests.
 These stunning disclosures,  which were released by the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of  Canada, comes directly from the telecom industry after years of keeping  their disclosure practices shielded from public view. In fact, the  industry was reluctant to provide the information to even the Privacy  Commissioner.
 According to correspondence I obtained under  the Access to Information Act, after the Commissioner sent letters to  the 12 biggest telecom and Internet providers seeking information on  their disclosure practices, Rogers, Bell and RIM proposed  aggregating the information to keep the data from individual companies  secret. The response dragged on for months, with Bell admitting at one  point that only  four providers had provided data and expressing concern about whether it  could submit even the aggregated response since it would be unable to  maintain anonymity [I’ve released the full ATIP I received here].
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