Toronto Star

Liberals leave behind raft of unfinished e-business

- Michael Geist Law Bytes

Prime Minister Paul Martin used Day 1 of this election campaign — to be Canada’s longest in 25 years — to focus on the Liberal record while in office. Whereas Martin chose to concentrat­e on balanced budgets and health care funding ( and the opposition on the sponsorshi­p scandal), the government’s record on technology law issues merits close examinatio­n.

Hot- button concerns such as education and the environmen­t get the lion’s share of attention, yet for the past 17 months of minority rule, the government has been remarkably active on the technology front, generating a long list of legislativ­e proposals and policy initiative­s. Much like the underlying policies themselves, the record is a mixed bag. It falls into three groups of developmen­ts: completed policies; policies that stalled when the government fell last week; and policies that never quite got off the ground.

Bill C- 37, which creates a Canadian do- not- call list, is the only major completed piece of legislatio­n. The statute, which received Senate approval just minutes before the upper chamber shut down for the election, should stand as a widely supported achievemen­t. Unfortunat­ely, potential bragging rights are undermined by the inclusion of a laundry list of exceptions that permit marketing calls notwithsta­nding the registrati­on of a phone number on the do- not- call list. With polling companies, charities, newspapers, businesses with a prior relationsh­ip, and political parties all qualifying for these exceptions, the resulting do- not- call list is of only marginal value.

In addition to Bill C- 37, the government upheld the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommun­ications Commission’s controvers­ial satellite- radio decision over the objection of a collection of loud lobby groups. As a result, satellite radio launched in Canada just last week. Industry Minister David Emerson also committed to nationwide broadband implementa­tion, allocating millions of dollars to ensure that all Canadians have access to high- speed Internet connectivi­ty.

Given the relatively short lifespan of a minority government, it is not surprising that the list of bills that died on the order paper is far longer than those enacted into law. Leading the way is Bill C- 60, the government’s copyright reform package. Introduced in June of this year, the bill, which never made it past first reading, addressed a range of digital copyright issues, including legal protection for digital locks and limitation­s on liability for Internet service providers, though it contained few provisions focused on the needs of individual Canadians. Weeks before the government fell, it introduced two additional bills of note. Bill C- 74, the Modernizat­ion of Investigat­ive Techniques Act, better known as “lawful access,” mandated new Internet surveillan­ce technologi­es and granted police power to compel disclosure of Internet subscriber informatio­n without a warrant.

Bill C-83 addressed the contentiou­s Internet pharmacy issue by granting the Minister of Health the right to ban pharmaceut­ical exports. Neither bill proceeded past first reading; they may return should the Liberals again form the government. Another issue awaiting the next government is the Canadian policy approach to Internet telephony. The CRTC’s spring voice over Internet protocol ( VoIP) decision was appealed to Cabinet by leading telecommun­ications companies, yet the issue remains unresolved.

Joining policies in limbo are the issues that never made it beyond an introducti­on or a public consultati­on. For example, the National Spam Task Force released its final report in May, calling for tough, new anti- spam legislatio­n. The government responded favourably, but did not unveil an anti- spam law before the election call last week. The government also launched two significan­t consultati­ons. Earlier this year, it opened the

door to merging the roles of

the Privacy Commission­er of

Canada and the Informatio­n

Commission­er, giving former Supreme Court Justice

Gerard LaForest the task of

studying the issue. His report, released last week, slammed the merger door shut and called on Ottawa to demonstrat­e renewed commitment to privacy. The telecommun­ications policy review, which covered everything from Internet connectivi­ty to phone privacy ( an issue made more relevant by the recent disclosure of the Privacy Commission­er of Canada’s phone records), generated dozens of responses. The final report is expected by year- end. The government also promised a series of copyright consultati­ons on thorny issues such as educationa­l use of the Internet and the private copying levy. Those consultati­ons might happen in the near future. Of course, it is the many issues that remain unaddresse­d that ultimately comprise the largest group of policy questions — from potential consultati­ons to the scheduled review of Canada’s national privacy legislatio­n to the need for protection against invasive copy controls such as those secretly used by Sony BMG. The ongoing election campaign will undoubtedl­y focus on that future, as will this column, which next week turns to the technology law questions that need answers during this winter campaign. Michael Geist holds the Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law at the University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law. He can reached at mgeist@uottawa.ca or online at www.michaelgei­st.ca.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada