Much of the discussion around the new lawful access bill (Bill C-22) has focused on provisions that improved upon Bill C-2, ...
The decades-long battle over lawful access entered a new phase yesterday with the introduction of Bill C-22, the Lawful ...
I’ve written extensively about Bill C-4 and the government’s effort to bury political party privacy rules that largely ...
Last spring, the government quietly inserted provisions that exempt political parties from the application of privacy ...
In the wake of reports that AI Minister Evan Solomon may press AI companies such as OpenAI to more aggressively report ...
Age verification, estimation or inference is seemingly all the rage right now. Vendors are promoting it as the solution to thorny challenges to limit access to certain sites and services and ...
On a hot August day nearly 32 years ago, I was married at the Shaarei Shomayim synagogue in Toronto. My Globe and Mail op-ed notes that I leafed through my wedding album this weekend as I grappled ...
My Globe and Mail op-ed begins by noting that AI Minister Evan Solomon summoned executives from OpenAI to Ottawa last week to ...
Over the past ten days, Canada has witnessed one of the fastest-moving technology policy debates in recent memory. What began ...
The Federal Court has issued a landmark decision (Blacklock’s Reports v. Attorney General of Canada) on copyright’s anti-circumvention rules which concludes that digital locks should not trump fair ...
The CRTC has released its much-anticipated Bill C-11 ruling on the initial mandated contributions from Internet streaming services. The headline the Commission and government will promote is that the ...
Canada’s privacy sector privacy law was born in the late 1990s at a time when e-commerce was largely a curiosity and companies such as Facebook did not exist. For years, the privacy community has ...
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