Categories
Links

Social Media Privacy – Part I

Social Media Privacy – Part I:

One in three anglophone Canadians say that not a single day goes by without checking into their social media feeds. Use of such applications has increased. On top of that, there is growing concern over how much information is being shared online and who may have access to it. Has the government been doing enough to protect Canadians? Is the social media industry being proactive or reactive? Will government institutions such as CSIS and CSES increase their monitoring of users in light of recent events? We will explore the current situation, what the future holds and what social media users can do to protect their information.

This week’s expert guests are:

  • Christopher Parsons, Postdoctoral Fellow at the Citizen Lab in the Munk School of Global Affairs at the University of Toronto and a Principal at Block G Privacy and Security Consulting
  • Avner Levin, Director of the Privacy and Cyber Crime Institute at Ryerson University, Associate Professor at the Ted Rogers School of Management, and Chair of the Law & Business Department
  • Sharon Polsky, President of the Privacy and Access Council of Canada

 

Categories
Aside Links

Christopher Parsons weighs in on privacy concerns in Canada

A roundup of what I’ve said, to whom, and that was published this month.

Christopher Parsons weighs in on privacy concerns in Canada

Categories
Links

Alberta Primetime – Increased surveillance powers in Canada

Alberta Primetime – Increased surveillance powers in Canada:

 

Categories
Links

New Documents Show Thousands of Unreported Wiretaps by Canadian Cops

New Documents Show Thousands of Unreported Wiretaps by Canadian Cops:

Christopher Parsons, a postdoctoral fellow with The Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto’s Munk School of Global Affairs, called the finding a missing link in our understanding of the scope of electronic surveillance in Canada.

“Wiretap data is, in theory, being recorded. But subscriber data and CDR data—neither of those have to be recorded under government statue,” Parsons explained. “There’s nothing in the legislation that will require agencies to record how often they got those court orders.”

Microsoft, BlackBerry and Cogeco, who were also presents at the meeting between Public Safety and industry stakeholders, did not respond to a request for comment.

“I think what’s most telling is it seems that the parties that have the best records of anyone in Canada is corporate Canada,” Parsons said. “These are the people who are being forced to use their resources to provide assistance to law enforcement, and law enforcement can’t even be bothered to record and disclose themselves how often this is going on.“

 

Categories
Quotations

2014.10.28

Elizabeth May, then the sole Member of Parliament representing the Green Party, tells the story of MPs of various party affiliations inquiring of her as to how she decides how she is going to vote on any particular bill or motion. She replies that she reads the bill, studies it, consults with her constituents, sometimes asks questions of the sponser, and then comes to her position. Incredulous, MPs from other parties exlaim about how labour intensive that must be and how much easier it is to simply follow the voting instructions provided by the party whips! Undoubtably that is true. However, I believe most constituents would be shocked to discover that their elected representatives are voting automatons, often too disengaged to even follow what item they are voting on.

Brent Rathgeber, Irresponsible Government: The Decline of Parliamentary Democracy in Canada
Categories
Links

Never let the facts get in the way of a good Cronkite moment

Never let the facts get in the way of a good Cronkite moment:

Lost in all the boosterism and talk of 9/11, solidarity and resolve was another inconvenient fact: A lot of the so-called ‘iron-clad’ reporting about what allegedly took place last Wednesday has turned out to be crap.

We were told that there were two or more shooters. Wrong. We were told that Wednesday’s shooting was likely “linked” to the hit and run death of Warrant Officer Patrice Vincent in St. St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec and hence that some sort of wider conspiracy was afoot. Wrong. We were told that shooter Michael Zahef-Bibeau was on a high-risk travel list. Wrong. We were told that Zahef-Bibeau wanted to travel to Syria. Wrong. (He hoped to go to Saudi Arabia – one of Canada’s best buddies in the Middle East.) We were told that the 90-odd individuals supposedly on a CSIS “watch” list were being “rounded up” by authorities. Wrong.

Even the “hero” Sergeant-at-Arms “story” is collapsing. Reportedly, Zahef-Bibeau was shot at least a dozen times and possibly dead before Kevin Vickers fired his gun.

Categories
Links

Conservatives mulling legislation making it illegal to condone terrorist acts online

Conservatives mulling legislation making it illegal to condone terrorist acts online:

Sources suggest the government is likely to bring in new hate speech legislation that would make it illegal to claim terrorist acts are justified online.

The Prime Minister told the House of Commons on Thursday that Canada’s law and policing powers need to be strengthened in the areas of surveillance, detention and arrest. He said work is already under way to provide law enforcement agencies with “additional tools” and that work will now be expedited.

The Conservative MP said the new legislation was crafted before this week’s events and is not “trauma tainted.”

Never waste a crisis: one way of using them is to to pass legislation that’s crafted ‘well in advance’ of any given crisis, but that could likely only pass with the support of the House and/or the citizenry in the face of the crisis.

Categories
Writing

Sadness and Fury Call for Enhanced Democracy, Not Enhanced Security

Today was deeply disturbing for me: what should have been a routine day of presenting at a conference panel turned into a day where I (and other conference members) were placed into lockdown (along with thousands of others in downtown Ottawa and government offices) in the wake of a serious crimes event.

The panel was for the IIC-Canada, and we were to discuss the topic of telecommunications transparency reporting. Immediately prior to the panel, however, a gunman shot and killed a reserve soldier standing guard at the National War Memorial in Ottawa. The gunman then proceeded to Parliament where he was ultimately shot dead. He was killed inside the central block.

Shortly after the panel, and just as lunch began, the second floor of the convention centre was cleared and we were moved to the third floor. It was a bit strange, truth be told: we moved using cargo elevators so as to keep people away from the building’s exterior windows. Then, after several hours under lockdown we were all freed to leave.

We were never in any particular danger. The lockdown was just a precaution for safety’s sake.

Nevertheless I’m sad. And furious. Absolutely furious that a reservist was killed at a war memorial. Enraged that someone had the audacity to enter the Parliament with the intent to cause serious harm and death to those within. Sickened that bad legislation may follow from the attack, an attack which targeted people who have committed themselves to protecting and advocating for Canadians. Public service is an honourable calling and the criminal targeted exactly those who had heard the call.

Thus far the Canadian media has generally been balanced. And I think my reaction – sadness and anger – is in common with many Canadians. We’re not terrified. We’re righteously pissed off at the individual or individuals who choose to attack the symbolic heart of our democracy.

No matter how problematic the laws passed, however dysfunctional the party politics, and regardless of the bad-behaviours in Parliament, our MPs are there to peacefully and verbally resolve and address the issues of the day. Words are the way that problems are addressed and dealt with; they are not solved using violence involving martial weaponry.

The solution to the attack today is not more weapons and less public access to Parliament or more constrained or secured debate but the opposite: equivalent parliamentary security and access to Parliament, and even more robust and transparent parliamentary debate. We can choose to seek vengeance or simply carry on in the face of this attack. I, like many or most Canadian, pray that the latter approach is adopted over the former.

Categories
Links

A Canadian judge could lose job after her pictures disclosed without consent

This story is absolutely appalling. In summary, a Canadian judge had pictures of her posted to the Internet without her consent and the result may be that she loses her job despite having done nothing wrong herself. She’s eminently qualified for her job and the fact that she has been subject to sexual harassment/violence should absolutely not disqualify her from her current position. It would be a travesty of justice if, after being victimized, she were to lose her job on the basis of having been victimized.

Categories
Links

Mapping The Canadian Government’s Telecommunications Surveillance

Mapping The Canadian Government’s Telecommunications Surveillance:

What:

Canadian federal government agencies, like many government agencies around the world, often request user data from telecommunications agencies for the purpose of surveillance. With few regulations in place that force governments or corporations to explain how Canadians’ telecommunications information is accessed or processed, the Citizen Lab along with its’ partners, worked over the course of a year to compile and disseminate lawfully accessible data that showed how often, for what reasons, and on what legal grounds telecommunications companies in Canada provided their subscribers’ data to state agencies.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation has a series of Counter-Surveillance Success Stories and my work over the past year’s been recognized in the stories. It’s really exceptional the excellent work that people are doing all around the world – you should check them all out!