Privacy Commissioner advocates update of Privacy Act before Ethics committee

Canada’s Privacy Act needs to be updated, Privacy Commissioner Daniel Therrien told the House of Commons Ethics Committee Monday, repeating a longstanding call the Privacy Commissioner has been making since before the COVID-19 pandemic. 

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B.C. court greenlights 1 of 3 class actions against Google for non-consensual data collection

A Supreme Court of British Columbia judge has temporarily stayed two separate class-action lawsuits against Alphabet Inc.’s Google, pending a final determination on the class-action certification of a third lawsuit aiming to represent users of all devices (including Android and Apple Inc.’s iOS smartphones) and on behalf of all users located in Canada, excluding Ontario and Quebec residents.

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Feds win fight to keep evidence secret in decision to ban China Mobile

A federal court judge has rejected a China Mobile Communications Group Co., Ltd. request to order the office of Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne and the governor-in-council (GIC) to hand over the evidence both offices used to decide to order China Mobile to pack up shop and leave Canada.

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Duclos and Tam face Ethics committee over data collection, RFP extended again

Data being collected by private companies on behalf of the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) was de-identified, aggregated and depersonalized, Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos and Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam repeatedly stressed to the House of Commons Ethics Committee on Thursday.

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Few stakeholders fully support Heritage proposal for online harms: report

The government needs to rethink its approach to regulating harmful content online, the majority of submissions to a consultation process argue, according to a summary of those findings released Thursday.  

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Scott must recuse himself from all proceedings involving wholesale-incumbent relations: CNOC

The trade group Competitive Network Operators of Canada has filed an application with the CRTC requesting that its chair, Ian Scott, “recuse himself, or be recused, from deciding all matters affecting service-based competition” pending the outcome of TekSavvy Solutions Inc.‘s court challenge to the CRTC’s reversal of its decision on regulated  wholesale rates.  

Scott’s recusal from matters involving the relationship between wholesale-based telecom companies and incumbents is, according to CNOC’s Thursday application, “crucial to restore public and stakeholder confidence in the CRTC, to protect it from further institutional damage, and to avoid the taint of bias.”

The application points to two issues raised in TekSavvy’s court challenge: comments made by Scott in an online Canadian Club Toronto event where the chair expressed a “personal” preference for facilities-based competition, as well as a meeting between Scott and BCE Inc. CEO (then COO) Mirko Bibic in an Ottawa bar.

“Despite the passage of time since the decision, and at least six months after the publicity surrounding claims of bias and impartiality… the matter remains controversial and in the public eye, further supporting the argument that it is difficult for the CRTC to carry out its deliberations so long as these allegations against the Chair remain unresolved,” CNOC wrote in the application.

Through the CRTC’s communications department, Ian Scott declined to comment on the application. 

There are several proceedings open before the CRTC that concern the relationship between wholesale-based internet service providers (ISPs) and incumbents. 

Chief among them is an ongoing proceeding where the regulator is considering changes to the disaggregated access model for high-speed internet access, after there has been virtually no uptake after the regulator first announced a move toward the model six years ago. In October, CNOC filed a challenge to the CRTC’s decision to not mandate access for wholesale-based ISPs to in-building wire in multi-dwelling units, and instead force companies to negotiate commercially with incumbents. 

In November, TekSavvy requested that Scott recuse himself from CNOC’s review and vary challenge to the in-building wire decision. 

The new application from CNOC comes after a number of controversial decisions at the CRTC in the past year, decisions that have seen competing court challenges, and a trio of petitions to cabinet, all of which await responses from the cabinet.

— Reporting by Michael Lee-Murphy at mleemurphy@thewirereport.ca and editing by Jenna Cocullo at jcocullo@thewirereport.ca. 

 

Bell reports slight revenue uptick 

BCE Inc’s overall revenue crept up 1.8 per cent, up to $6.21 billion from $6.1 billion, from this time last year, the company reported in its fourth quarter financial results released Thursday

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Gov. reintroduces Broadcasting Act update, with social media exemption

OTTAWA — Canadian Heritage Minister Pablo Rodríguez called previous concerns over social media broadcasting regulations “legitimate questions” Wednesday as he introduced the Government’s second attempt at updating the Broadcasting Act, now known as the Online Streaming Act. The new bill brings back an exemption for social media platforms, while maintaining that the act will apply to commercial content on social media sites.

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Tories attack government over PHAC data tracking, Huawei delay

Two Conservative MPs lambasted the Liberal government on Tuesday over data tracking by the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) and the government’s delay in deciding whether Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. can deploy its equipment in Canada’s 5G networks.

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Marla Boltman to head up Friends

Friends, formerly known as Friends of Canadian Broadcasting, announced Wednesday that Marla Boltman has been appointed as executive director and spokesperson, replacing Daniel Bernhard. 

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