Toronto Star

Internet privacy hangs in the balance

Political parties remain silent as bureaucrat­s and police debate court ruling to protect user info

- Michael Geist

Canada’s controvers­ial anti-terrorism bill, Bill C-51, has emerged as a key talking point in the current election campaign.

Pointing to its big implicatio­ns for privacy and surveillan­ce, the NDP sees political opportunit­y by emphasizin­g its opposition to the bill, while the Liberals have been forced to defend their decision to support it (but call for amendments if elected). The Conservati­ves unsurprisi­ngly view the bill as evidence of their commitment to national security and have even floated the possibilit­y of additional antiterror measures.

While Bill C-51 now represents a legislativ­e shorthand for the parties’ positions on privacy and surveillan­ce, a potentiall­y bigger privacy issue merits closer attention.

Last year, the government concluded more than a decade of debate over “lawful access” legislatio­n by enacting a bill that provided new law-enforcemen­t powers for access to Internet and telecom data.

The bill came just as reports revealed that telecom providers faced more than a million requests for such informatio­n each year.

And the Supreme Court issued its landmark Spencer decision, which ruled that Canadians have a reasonable expectatio­n of privacy in their basic subscriber informatio­n, including name, address and IP address.

The upshot of the lawful access legislatio­n and the court ruling is that Canada’s leading telecom and Internet companies reversed longstandi­ng policies that granted warrantles­s access to basic subscriber informatio­n.

Police can now rely on several new warrants to gain access to some informatio­n (including “metadata” that can reveal extensive informatio­n about the who, when and where of Internet and phone communicat­ions), but companies are typically refusing to disclose basic subscriber informatio­n without a warrant.

Despite an internal RCMP survey that concluded the new requiremen­ts have had “no significan­t negative effects,” the tougher privacy standards have been under steady threat. Some lower courts have sought to distinguis­h the Supreme Court ruling and allow for access to subscriber informatio­n without a warrant.

Meanwhile, law-enforcemen­t officials and government policymake­rs have quietly been working on a proposal to allow for real-time access to basic subscriber informatio­n. The Canadian Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police (CACP) revealed at its August annual conference that officials have partnered with the government to develop a “reasonable law” in response to the Spencer decision.

The government has not commented on details on the proposed reforms, but the CACP document indicates there are three possibilit­ies currently under considerat­ion. These include an administra­tive, non-judicial system that would allow for warrantles­s access without judicial oversight, a new judicial order that would ensure courts oversee disclosure, or a combinatio­n of a new order that could be issued by an administra­tive body.

The difference­s between the proposals sound technical, but at their heart raise the question of whether the government will support access to subscriber informatio­n without a warrant and court oversight.

The CACP indicates that the next scheduled meeting to discuss the issue is planned for November, weeks after the end of the election campaign.

In other words, this election could determine the future path of Canadian law on access to subscriber informatio­n.

None of the major political parties have yet taken a public position on the issue. In fact, the Conservati­ves steadfastl­y refused to disclose how the Department of Justice was responding to the Spencer decision, regularly claiming to be “studying” the ruling.

The issue requires answers to two questions. First, do the parties support the Supreme Court’s Spencer decision and the notion of a reasonable expectatio­n of privacy in subscriber informatio­n such that a warrant is required for its disclosure? Second, how, if at all, do the parties propose to amend the law to allow for enhanced access to subscriber informatio­n for law enforcemen­t?

The answers to those two questions will go a long way to determinin­g the privacy protection enjoyed by Canadian Internet users. The current election campaign may be the best time to get each party to put its position on the public record. 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.

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 ?? EVA HAMBACH/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Proposed changes to Internet privacy law raises questions of whether Ottawa will support access to subscriber informatio­n without a warrant.
EVA HAMBACH/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Proposed changes to Internet privacy law raises questions of whether Ottawa will support access to subscriber informatio­n without a warrant.

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