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Lobbyist Pressure Focused on Watering Down Anti-Spam Bill

The introduction last spring of Bill C-27 – the Electronic Commerce Protection Act – represented the culmination of years of effort to address concerns that Canada is rapidly emerging as a spam haven.  Industry Minister Tony Clement’s anti-spam bill has steadily made its way through the legislative process, with the Standing Committee on Industry likely to conduct its final "clause by clause" review over the next two weeks.

Although support for anti-spam legislation would seemingly be uncontroversial, my weekly technology law column (Toronto Star version, homepage version) notes that various business groups have mounted a spirited attack against the bill, claiming requirements to obtain to user consent before sending commercial email will create new barriers to doing business online.  The Conservative MPs on the committee have remained supportive of the bill, yet Liberal MPs have expressed growing concern about some of the bill’s provisions.

A close examination reveals that the bill sets reasonable limits for online marketing consistent with laws found in countries such as Australia, New Zealand, and Japan.  In fact, there are four major caveats to the consent requirement.

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October 5, 2009 11 comments Columns

Tracking the Dramatic Growth of Open Access

Heather Morrison tracks the latest growth statistics of open access, including more than 4,000 fully open access peer reviewed journals in DOAJ, 1,500 open access repositories, 30 million scientific publications free online, and 20 percent of the world's medical literature freely available two years after publication.

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October 1, 2009 Comments are Disabled News

Yet Another Global Study Finds Canada Lagging on Broadband

Research teams from the Saïd Business School at the University of Oxford and the University of Oviedo’s Department of Applied Economics (supported by Cisco) have released a new study on global broadband quality.  Researchers analyzed approximately 24 million broadband speed test records from Speedtest.net from May to July of this […]

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October 1, 2009 20 comments News

The Three Laws of Open Government Data

David Eaves has a great post on the three laws of open government data: find it, play with it, and share it.

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October 1, 2009 Comments are Disabled News

DNCL Violator Responds to CRTC Fine

P2Pnet.net reports on the response from Rob Sugar to a do-not-call list violation fine.

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September 30, 2009 4 comments News