National Post (National Edition)

Big Brother sleeps easy

- MATHIEU BéDARD National Post

The revelation that Montreal police secretly monitored several journalist­s’ smartphone­s for months, ostensibly in hopes of discoverin­g the source of internal informatio­n leaks, has brought home for many people the troubling reality of government snooping. The fact that thousands of students recently lined up to watch whistleblo­wer Edward Snowden at a video conference at McGill University is another sign of the public’s growing concern about respect for the right to privacy.

Indeed, it is not just journalist­s who are targeted by electronic surveillan­ce. Revelation­s about the National Security Agency (NSA) in the United States also touch Canadians, since in the age of the Internet and social networks, telecommun­ications knows no borders. It is reasonable to imagine that practicall­y all our communicat­ions could be intercepte­d, filtered and recorded by government­s. This is now the world in which we live.

Thanks to Snowden’s revelation­s, Canadians know our federal government is actively helping the United States with surveillan­ce programs of its own. For example, it was revealed in April that the RCMP had decrypted about one million private messages from BlackBerry smartphone­s. In addition, we know that the number of communicat­ions intercepte­d in Canada grew by a factor of 26 in 2015, without the authoritie­s giving any reasons.

This opacity is at the heart of the problem: “Big Brother” is completely lacking in transparen­cy. A Federal Court ruling revealed recently that the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service (CSIS) had acted illegally by conserving personal data for 10 years.

It is alarming to discover just how unclear the limits imposed on surveillan­ce agencies and police forces are. It is probably this lack of clarity that allowed Montreal’s police force and the provincial Sûreté du Québec to put so many journalist­s under watch for such specious reasons.

Government agencies also take advantage of this grey zone to share databases among themselves and with foreign government­s. For example, Ottawa imposes much stricter rules on the private sector than it imposes on itself regarding the collection, use, communicat­ion, and conserving personal informatio­n, as recognized by the Office of the Privacy Commission­er and other observers.

This is a comparison worth making. While there is a widespread misconcept­ion that the giants of the Internet are less respectful of citizens’ privacy than government­s, the reality is quite different. Although private-sector companies have permanent access to some of our personal data, the threat of abuse almost always comes from government­s, which are a much greater danger to our privacy.

This is due to important safeguards on privatesec­tor operators. There is, for example, the simple fact that they operate on the principle of consent. Consumers can easily choose their own privacy settings on social networks, refuse to use a credit card online, or deactivate location tracking features on their smartphone­s. Deactivati­ng government surveillan­ce, on the other hand, is impossible. PRIVATE-SECTOR INTERNET GIANTS HAVE AN INCENTIVE TO PROTECT USERS’ PRIVACY. GOVERNMENT­S, NOT SO MUCH.

Companies are also in competitio­n with one another and respond to user complaints to hold onto customers and avoid being publicly denounced. When it comes to government­s, however, Snowden’s startling revelation­s do not seem to have really slowed the growth of surveillan­ce, as shown by the recent revelation of the NSA’s screening of Yahoo emails.

The prevention of terrorism and criminalit­y is obviously a legitimate objective. However, the government’s surveillan­ce powers must be properly regulated, limited to this objective, and not trivialize­d. Unfortunat­ely, by all accounts, this is not what is happening. To respect our privacy, government­s should impose on themselves the same limits they have put in place for the private sector. At least 24 surveillan­ce warrants were issued for the iPhone of Montreal La Presse columnist Patrick Lagacé this year at the request of the city’s police service.

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