Waterloo Region Record

Parties police themselves on using voters’ data: watchdog

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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 AggregateI­Q 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 appears before a Commons privacy and ethics committee on the breach of personal informatio­n involving Cambridge Analytica and Facebook, in Ottawa on Tuesday.
JUSTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS Privacy commission­er Daniel Therrien appears before a Commons privacy and ethics committee on the breach of personal informatio­n involving Cambridge Analytica and Facebook, in Ottawa on Tuesday.

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