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Rogers opens curtain on warrantless government snooping

Rogers opens curtain on warrantless government snooping:

OTTAWA—Rogers Communications gave Canadians their first real peek behind the curtain of warrantless government snooping Thursday, revealing they were asked almost 175,000 times for their customers’ data in 2013.

Rogers became the first major Canadian telecommunications provider to issue a transparency report, revealing aggregate numbers on how many law enforcement requests they receive in a year.

More telecom and Internet service providers are expected to follow suit, as Canadian customers learn more about the scope of government access to their personal data.

 

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Rogers got 175,000 official requests for customer info last year

Rogers got 175,000 official requests for customer info last year:

An informal coalition — including The University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab, academics and civil liberties organizations — said in March that Canadians have only a vague understanding of how, why, and how often companies have disclosed information to government agencies.

This week the coalition received an updated response from Internet provider TekSavvy Solutions — one of Rogers’ smaller competitors — saying it received 52 requests from government authorities in 2012 and 2013. It made 17 disclosures related to criminal investigations and denied the remaining 35.

Christopher Parsons, a postdoctoral fellow with The Citizen Lab, said the Rogers and TekSavvy reports are “positive steps in the right direction.”

He singled out TekSavvy’s response as “the gold standard” for company transparency on handling of subscriber information due to the extensive detail in its report.

“The bar has now been set: transparency reports are expected when doing business in Canada,” Parsons said.

“There’s only a question of how long until other companies adhere to what is becoming an industry best practice in Canada.”

 

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Rogers, TekSavvy first to divulge customer data requests (Subscription)

Rogers, TekSavvy first to divulge customer data requests (Subscription):

As Cartt.ca reported, a coalition of Canadian academics and consumer groups asked the country’s biggest telecommunications service providers in January to reveal the extent to which they pass on their customers’ private information to government agencies when asked. Sixteen different telcos were asked to respond or commit to responding by March 3, 2014.

When contacted by Cartt.ca, Telus said it is preparing a transparency report and plans to issue it this summer. A spokesperson reiterated that the company only provides confidential customer information to third parties pursuant to valid court orders or other applicable law, and that it contests orders if it believes they “overreach”.

Bell responded to Cartt.ca, but did not specify whether it would issue a transparency report. “Bell releases information to law enforcement agencies only when required by law and always in compliance with federal privacy and CRTC regulations”, reads the spokesperson’s emailed response.

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In shadow of NSA revelations, Rogers, TekSavvy open up on government data requests

In shadow of NSA revelations, Rogers, TekSavvy open up on government data requests:

In the wake of blockbuster revelations by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, Canada’s telecommunications companies are starting to pull back the curtains on their relationships with government authorities around the sharing of customer information.

Rogers Communications Inc. on Thursday released what it called its 2013 Transparency Report, a brief four-page document detailing the number and types of requests the company has received, and the legal framework governing its response.

The Rogers report comes on the heels of similar disclosure from independent communications provider TekSavvy Solutions Inc. Other providers are expected to follow suit later this year.

 

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Teksavvy and Rogers publish transparency reports highlighting the extent of government data requests

Teksavvy and Rogers publish transparency reports highlighting the extent of government data requests:

Third-party internet provider Teksavvy and Rogers, one of the largest ISPs in Canada, have published the first Canadian telecommunications transparency reports.

Both Teksavvy and Rogers have released documents detailing the subscriber information both companies have released to police and spy agencies over the last few years. Teksavvy disclosed their transparency report first and then Rogers followed soon after.

 

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Canada’s ISPs Are Finally Revealing How Often the Government Requests User Data

Canada’s ISPs Are Finally Revealing How Often the Government Requests User Data:

Two Canadian telecommunications companies—Rogers Communications and TekSavvy Solutions—are the country’s first to disclose the number of requests they receive from government agencies each year, and also detail what customer data they will and will not hand over upon request.

TekSavvy’s disclosure data was published in a letter to the Munk School of Global Affairs’s Citizen Lab released late Wednesday evening, in response to questions submitted by Citizen Lab researcher Christopher Parsons and other privacy academics in late January. TekSavvy has promised that regular transparency reports are still to come.

“I’m hopeful that this will provide the clear rationale for other companies to come forward with equivalent responses,” Parsons said in an interview. “This is especially the case for companies such as TELUS, which stated in their responses they were investigating how much information they could place on the public record.”

At the time of publication, TELUS had yet to respond to a request from Motherboard for comment.

When asked if Bell would release a similar transparency report, a spokesperson would only say that the company “releases information to law enforcement agencies only when required by law and always in compliance with federal privacy and CRTC regulations.”

 

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iOS 8 strikes an unexpected blow against location tracking

iOS 8 strikes an unexpected blow against location tracking:

Good: Apple is demonstrably improving an aspect of wifi privacy. Kudos to them!

However: Retailers are using Bluetooth to engage in the same activity, so ideally a similar privacy enhancing technique will be designed when Bluetooth functionality is turned on.

Depressing Reality: I’ll really believe that Apple is invested in privacy when they enable/initiate similar privacy by design functions in their own physical environment system, iBeacons.

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Harper: Trust Me

Cartoon by Greg Perry

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Spidey Senses tingling over C-13

Spidey Senses tingling over C-13:

This is the piece of the day – stylistically, perhaps the past month – on C-13. You should read it. Now.

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Canadians are lax on privacy, Senate committee hears

Canadians are lax on privacy, Senate committee hears:

The fact that a former director of CSEC is asserting that it’s Canadians’ own fault that their privacy is being infringed upon is hopefully just rhetoric and not reflective of his real beliefs. As he must know, there are enormous pressures that individuals face to use contemporary communications services and never be cognizant of the full ramifications about the use of those services.

Such pressures have little to nothing to do with social media: just consider the leaking of information from mobile and desktop systems that follows from just leaving the device on or using it for the most basic functionalities. In the drive to make corporate consumer surveillance ‘transparent’ consumers have become grossly disadvantaged; learning and understanding how systems work, today, requires an immense effort. Such an effort should not be demanded to log into email or social media accounts, or fully grasp why a targeted ad has been displayed.

Of course, Mr. Adams knows this. He understands that privacy has not been designed into services and that, once alerted to gross and pervasive failures, informed people are routinely astounded, shocked, and angry. Most of the Internet uses the equivalent of Pintos and the NSA, CSEC, and other five eyes partners know exactly where the gas tanks are. They’re just reluctant to tell the rest of us and then blame us when we learn we’ve been rolling around the Internet-equivalent of privacy deathtraps.