Calgary Herald

Watchdog not satisfied with Bell move

Says ad- tracking file remains open despite telecom’s opt- in about- face

- ROSS MAROWITS

The Office of the Privacy Commission­er says it is not yet satisfied with Bell’s commitment to seek customer consent before tracking cellphone use to deliver targeted online advertisin­g.

The federal agency met Wednesday with the telecom giant, a day after the company said it would accept the commission­er’s recommenda­tion to get explicit consent or opt- in before using private viewing patterns and sensitive personal informatio­n to create profiles that are sold to advertiser­s.

Bell Canada never issued a news release but Bell said in an email that it would “abide by the privacy commission’s decision, including the opt- in approach.”

Privacy commission­er spokeswoma­n Tobi Cohen said talks are continuing, but the commission­er is keeping open the option of pursuing the matter in Federal Court “if a solution cannot be reached to our satisfacti­on.”

“Suffice it to say that it would be premature to say that we have arrived at a solution on the issue of opt- in,” she said.

Despite the commission­er’s efforts, the issue of Bell Canada tracking cellphone use remains unresolved until the CRTC rules on complaints filed by consumer groups.

Calling the practice an abuse of privacy, the Public Interest Advocacy Centre has filed a complaint with the CRTC arguing Bell has gone beyond its role as a provider of telecom services.

Executive director John Lawford said telecom legislatio­n prohibits Bell from using confidenti­al informatio­n to support a new business that secures revenues from selling to advertiser­s the interest profiles of its customers.

“I doubt the genuinenes­s of ( Bell’s) climbdown too,” he said after Bell signalled it would accept the commission­er’s recommenda­tion. “I’m happy that they are, but it’s not the end of the story.”

Privacy commission­er Daniel Therrien had urged Bell to review its approach after releasing the results of an investigat­ion prompted by an “unpreceden­ted” 170 privacy complaints.

It determined Bell shouldn’t assume customers are consenting to have their personal informatio­n tracked simply because they haven’t explicitly objected.

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