The Hamilton Spectator

Parties police themselves on using voters’ data: watchdog

-

OTTAWA — The federal privacy watchdog is calling on the government to address significan­t gaps in the law that leave political parties to police themselves when it comes to how they collect and use data on voters.

Speaking to a parliament­ary committee Tuesday, federal privacy commission­er Daniel Therrien says political parties are only bound by internal, voluntary privacy policies, and he’s concerned that no independen­t body ensures they follow their own rules.

Therrien has been calling for changes to strengthen privacy laws to cover how political parties use data, and he says that with a recent internatio­nal scandal involving Facebook there’s never been a better time for action.

His testimony comes as policymake­rs and regulators around the world examine how to better protect users’ online data following a scandal that allegedly saw the personal informatio­n of millions of Facebook users improperly accessed for political purposes.

Facebook estimates the personal data of 622,161 users in Canada — and nearly 87 million worldwide — was inappropri­ately harvested by firms that allegedly used the informatio­n to help deliver electoral wins in the U.K. Brexit referendum and the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al campaign.

Therrien’s office recently joined forces with British Columbia’s privacy commission­er to investigat­e Facebook and Canadian company Aggregate IQ Data Services Ltd. — two firms at the centre of the global uproar over the unauthoriz­ed use of socialmedi­a data.

He says the investigat­ion, which allows includes collaborat­ion with the U.K. privacy commission­er, is “somewhat complex.”

But he hopes to conclude it within a year.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Privacy commission­er Daniel Therrien told a Commons privacy and ethics committee Tuesday that political parties are only bound by internal and voluntary privacy policies, which he says nobody ensures they follow.
JUSTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS Privacy commission­er Daniel Therrien told a Commons privacy and ethics committee Tuesday that political parties are only bound by internal and voluntary privacy policies, which he says nobody ensures they follow.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada