Post Tagged with: "surveillance"

What Do You Want the Internet To Be?

My weekly Law Bytes column (homepage version) highlights several potential Canadian policies that may create a very different Internet. They include ubiquitous network surveillance through the lawful access initiative, ISPs that engage in packet preferencing as in the two cases last week involving Vonage and Telkom Kenya, a new extended license that would require schools to pay millions of dollars for content that is currently freely available on the Internet, and rules that make it far easier to remove an allegedly infringing song than to remove dangerous child pornography. It concludes by riffing on an old Nortel ad campaign by asking whether this is really what we want the Internet to be?

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March 7, 2005 Comments are Disabled Columns

Computer And E-Mail Workplace Surveillance In Canada

Osgoode Hall Law School, Toronto

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February 12, 2003 Comments are Disabled Conferences

Computer and E-Mail Workplace Surveillance in Canada: The Shift From Reasonable Expectation of Priva

Computer and E-Mail Workplace Surveillance in Canada: The Shift From Reasonable Expectation of Privacy to Reasonable Surveillance, 82 Canadian Bar Review 151-89 (2003)

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January 1, 2003 Comments are Disabled Scholarship

Computer And E-Mail Workplace Surveillance In Canada

Yukon Bar and Bench Day, Whitehorse, Yukon

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October 12, 2002 Comments are Disabled Conferences

Computer And E-Mail Workplace Surveillance In Canada

Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice Dialogues About Justice: The Public, Legislators, Courts and the Media, Hull, Quebec

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October 12, 2002 Comments are Disabled Conferences