Come back with a warrant by Rosalyn Davis (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0) https://flic.kr/p/aoPzWb

Come back with a warrant by Rosalyn Davis (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0) https://flic.kr/p/aoPzWb

Lawful Access

CIPPIC Launches DigitalAgenda.ca

CIPPIC has launched an exciting new advocacy site – DigitalAgenda.ca. The site provides information and tools for speaking out on copyright, net neutrality, lawful access, and the ECPA.  The copyright section is the most robust at the moment, complete with a sample letter for the consultation and an Idea Torrent […]

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August 14, 2009 Comments are Disabled News

Search Engine Talks to Van Loan on Privacy Expectations

The latest Search Engine podcast includes an interview with Public Safety Minister Peter Van Loan on the lawful access legislation.

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June 30, 2009 2 comments News

Cross Country Checkup on Lawful Access

CBC's Cross Country Checkup has posted the podcast of the recent program that focused on Internet privacy and lawful access.  I appeared along with Public Safety Minister Peter van Loan.

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June 29, 2009 1 comment News

Cosh on Lawful Access

Colby Cosh in the National Post on lawful access: "No bogus, ill-advised expansion of state power was ever perpetrated on this continent without "families" being hauled out as part of the pretext."

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June 23, 2009 3 comments News

Ordinary Thursday Anything But For Canadian Internet

My weekly technology law column (Toronto Star version, homepage version) notes that last Thursday began as an ordinary, rainy, spring day in Ottawa.  Canadian politicians, having just avoided an unwanted election, were only two days away from an extended summer break.  Yet by the end of the day, a trio of events unfolded that could help shape the Internet in Canada for years to come.

The first event took place mid-morning, with the introduction of new lawful access legislation.  The bills would dramatically change the Internet in Canada, requiring Internet service providers to install new surveillance capabilities, force them to disclose subscriber information such as name, address, and email address without a court order, as well as grant police broad new powers to obtain Internet transmission data.

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June 22, 2009 14 comments Columns