Toronto Star

TECH WARS, A TO Z

Michael Geist gives an alphabetic­al rundown of who was butting heads in 2014,

- Michael Geist

With revelation­s about millions of warrantles­s requests for Internet and telecom subscriber informatio­n, and heated battles over the potential regulation of Netflix, law and technology issues garnered headlines all year long. A look back at 2014 from A to Z:

A is for Amanda Todd, the cyberbully­ing victim whose name was regularly invoked by the federal government to support Bill C-13, its lawful access/cyberbully­ing bill. The bill passed despite Amanda’s mother Carol raising privacy concerns and not receiving an invitation to appear before the Senate committee studying the bill.

B is for Bell’s targeted advertisin­g program that involves the use of consumer location and browsing habits. The program was the target of multiple complaints to the Privacy Commission­er of Canada.

C is for CASL, Canada’s anti-spam law, which took effect in July and generated considerab­le panic among many Canadian businesses.

Dis for Digital Canada 150, the long-awaited digital strategy released in April by industry minister James Moore.

E is for Equustek Solutions, a British Columbia-based company that obtained a controvers­ial court order requiring Google to remove a website from its global index.

F is for Fearon, the Supreme Court of Canada decision which affirmed that police can search a cellphone without a warrant during an arrest.

Gis for Canadian heritage minister Shelley Glover, whose leaked proposal to create a new copyright exception for political advertisin­g sparked heated debate.

His for the Children’s Hospital Of Eastern Ontario, which filed a lawsuit challengin­g the validity of patents based on human genes.

I is for in-transit shipments, which were excluded from Bill C-8, Canada’s anti-counterfei­ting legislatio­n, which received royal assent late in the year.

J is for Quebec judge Alain Breault, who awarded a woman damages after she claimed that Google was slow to blur a revealing picture of her posted on the Google Street View service.

Kis for Ben Klass, a communicat­ions policy researcher whose net neutrality complaint over mobile video services led companies such as Rogers and Vidéotron to alter their service offerings.

L is for language laws, whose applicatio­n to the Internet by Quebec authoritie­s led some global e-commerce sites to stop serving the Quebec market.

Mis for the Marrakesh Copyright Treaty for the Blind, which Canada surprising­ly did not sign after playing a key role during the treaty negotiatio­ns.

Nis for Netflix, which engaged in a high-profile battle with the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommun­ications Commission over whether it was subject to the regulator’s broadcast jurisdicti­on.

Ois for the one-point-two million annual requests for subscriber informatio­n by law enforcemen­t and government department­s in 2011, as revealed this year.

P is for Pandora, the music streaming service that may now enter the Canadian market after new royalty rates were establishe­d by the Copyright Board of Canada.

Qis for Quebec.com, the domain name that the Government of Que- bec failed to obtain after filing a complaint.

R is for Rogers, which became the first major Canadian telecom company to release a transparen­cy report on its subscriber informatio­n disclosure practices.

S is for the landmark Spencer Supreme Court of Canada decision, which ruled that Internet users have a reasonable expectatio­n of privacy in their subscriber informatio­n.

T is for Daniel Therrien, Canada’s new privacy commission­er, who surprised observers by immediatel­y criticizin­g the federal government’s proposed lawful access legislatio­n.

Uis for Uber, the popular app- based car service, which faced regulatory battles in cities across the country.

V is for Voltage Pictures, which won a court order to obtain informatio­n on thousands of alleged file sharers.

Wis for wireless competitio­n, an ongoing focal point of government policy.

X is for the redacted informatio­n that frequently accompanie­s access to informatio­n request records. The liberal use of exemptions was one of the issues in the spotlight as part of debates over an underfunde­d system on the brink of collapse.

Y is for the Law Society of Yukon, one of dozens of “investigat­ive bodies” to which organizati­ons may voluntaril­y disclose personal informatio­n without a warrant under the current law. The government pointed to the complexity of the investigat­ive bodies system as a justificat­ion for expanding warrantles­s voluntary disclosure in Bill S-4, the Digital Privacy Act.

Z is for Zithromax, the brand name for azithromyc­in, one of the world’s leading antibiotic­s. The prospect of increased drug costs was one of the most contentiou­s aspects of the Canada-European Trade Agreement, which concluded this year. Michael Geist holds the Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law at the University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law. He can be reached at mgeist@uottawa.ca or online at michaelgei­st.ca.

 ?? PAUL SAKUMA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? N is for the online streaming service Netflix, which battled the CRTC over whether it was subject to the regulator’s broadcast jurisdicti­on.
PAUL SAKUMA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS N is for the online streaming service Netflix, which battled the CRTC over whether it was subject to the regulator’s broadcast jurisdicti­on.
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