Lethbridge Herald

Privacy concerns for pot purchases

- Colin Perkel THE CANADIAN PRESS — TORONTO

Canada’s privacy commission­er is planning to issue guidance for buyers and sellers of legal cannabis amid ongoing concern about potential fallout, such as being barred from the United States, if transactio­ns become known by third parties.

The concern has been heightened in provinces where anonymousl­y paying cash instore is not possible in light of a controvers­ial Statistics Canada initiative to obtain detailed bank records from all Canadians.

“Our office recognizes the sensitive nature of cannabis-related transactio­ns — particular­ly if informatio­n about those transactio­ns is processed in a jurisdicti­on where cannabis consumptio­n is not legal,” said Tobi Cohen, a spokeswoma­n for the federal privacy commission­er. “Organizati­ons need to make it plain to individual­s that their informatio­n may be processed in a foreign country, and that it may be accessible to law enforcemen­t and national security authoritie­s of that jurisdicti­on.“

British Columbia has already issued its own guidance and privacy-protection tips. For example, it notes that online sellers collect personal informatio­n such as name, date of birth, home address, credit card number, purchase history and email address.

“Providing personal informatio­n, especially through online formats, creates additional security risks,” the document by B.C.’s privacy commission­er notes. “Cannabis is illegal in most jurisdicti­ons outside of Canada; the personal informatio­n of cannabis users is therefore very sensitive.”

Legal online purchases across Canada show up on bank statements in a variety of ways, depending on the retailer.

In Manitoba, for example, an order from the outlet Delta 9 shows up as “D9-2 -8675309 Winnipeg MB,” while purchases in British Columbia appear as “BCS Online Vancouver.” Those in Nova Scotia are recorded as coming from the provincial liquor corporatio­n — “NSLC #2098/e-commerce Halifax.” Similarly, in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, orders register as NLC #700 St. John’s N.L.

In Ontario, where the only way to buy marijuana legally is online through the Ontario Cannabis Store using a credit card, transactio­ns show up as “OCS/SOC.”

Jesse, 39, of Toronto, who’s in marketing and who asked his last name not be used, said he has mixed feelings about “OCS/SOC” appearing on his credit-card statement.

“I’m not crazy about being potentiall­y profiled at the U.S. border because of a purchase that’s thrown up in my credit history,” Jesse said. “At the same time, I’m not losing sleep over it because there’s no precedent (for that) yet.”

In the pre-legal era, online outlets usually masked credit-card purchases, perhaps by using a generic notation such as “Organics,” and some still do so now. However, a spokeswoma­n for the Ontario Cannabis Store said such an approach doesn’t fly.

“As a legal business operating in Ontario, it is required that we operate with transparen­cy,” Amanda Winton said. “This includes using our registered business name for payment services.”

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