Today is Data Privacy Day 2010!

January 28, 2010

January 28th is Data Privacy Day 2010! Canada’s Privacy Commissioner is marking the day by “urging companies to ensure they have the proper systems in place to safeguard information; and reminding individuals to think twice about what they post on the Internet.” See the Privacy Commissioner’s news release here.


A Conversation with Jennifer Stoddart, Privacy Commissioner of Canada

January 25, 2010

I’m very pleased to be able to post the following conversation with Jennifer Stoddart

Since becoming Canada’s Privacy Commissioner in 2003, Commissioner Stoddart has undoubtedly raised the value of privacy in a time when security, trade, technology and consumer expectations have created a volatile atmosphere for our personal information. I might add that she has accomplished this admirable feat with passion and professionalism.  As a result, Canadians have been exceptionally well-served.

Of course, I’d like to thank Commissioner Stoddart for agreeing to engage in this online Q & A conversation.  If you’d like to learn more about Jennifer Stoddart, the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada (the “OPC”) or the issues raised in this conversation, I’d encourage you to visit the OPC’s website and blog.

Q. How did you get involved in the world of privacy?

A. Back in the spring of 2000, I happened to read an article in the New York Times Magazine by the noted American legal scholar Jeffrey Rosen. Prof. Rosen was explaining how personal privacy was being subtly eroded in the digital age. I was fascinated.

I was working at the Quebec Human Rights Commission at the time. The next week, I was asked to head up Quebec’s Access to Information and Privacy Commission, and that’s the field I’ve been in ever since.

Q. But it’s coming to an end.

A. Sadly. My seven-year term as Privacy Commissioner will wind up this year. On the plus side, though, I can look back with considerable pride at the progress we’ve made. The encroachments on privacy in this digital era really are staggering, but that doesn’t mean we’re letting them bowl us over.

Last year’s investigation into a complaint against Facebook was surely the most high-profile example of the kind of influence we have. And beyond that I would say that we’re making a meaningful difference, in countless other ways, every day of the year.

Q. What are the most rewarding aspects of being the Privacy Commissioner of Canada?

A. Certainly one of the most rewarding things for me is to know that our work matters, that it has a real and positive impact on the lives of Canadians.

As you know, it’s become fashionable in some circles to suggest that privacy is pretty much dead in this era of digital exhibitionism. But I think that’s totally wrong. And the best evidence for that was the worldwide response to our Facebook investigation.

Privacy may look different today than it did a generation – or even a decade – ago. But it remains an incredibly important and cherished value to Canadians. And to the extent that my Office can help protect that value, and advance privacy rights, I would say that is the most rewarding aspect of my job.

Q. What do you consider to be the greatest challenges for the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada?

A. Our biggest challenges are the same that preoccupy data-protection authorities around the world: How to safeguard privacy rights in the face of so many rapidly changing technologies. You yourself have blogged about many of them – cloud computing, behavioural marketing, genetic technologies, to name just a few.

We’re seeing unimaginable quantities of data flash around the world, including to countries where data-protection laws are slim to non-existent. We’re also seeing technologies employed in the service of national security and law enforcement, but they’re guarded behind a wall of secrecy.

So the challenges are real, and they are huge.

Q. So how does an Office like yours keep up?

A. I guess the short answer is: By working smarter. We have zeroed in on four priority privacy challenges that are shaping and streamlining our work for the years ahead: information technology, genetic technology, national security and the protection of identity integrity.

We are re-engineering our internal processes to better handle the complaints and inquiries that come to our Office. We’re picking and choosing our privacy audits and our communications and public outreach efforts in order to maximize our impact. We’re ramping up our issuance of guidance, on the theory that an ounce of prevention outweighs a pound of cure. And we’re working with the global data-protection community, since so many of the challenges are international in scope.

But, most important of all, we’ve recently attracted an infusion of very bright, very knowledgeable – and in many cases young – new employees to key positions in our Office. They are really making a difference.

Q. If you could make a few recommendations for Canadian business leaders, what would you say?

A. First I’d thank them for having embraced PIPEDA, the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act as it came into force over the past nine years. When I look at the situation of our neighbours to the south, where there is no single law at the federal level to protect the personal information of consumers in a commercial setting, I am deeply gratified by the way things can work up here.

Beyond that, I would encourage business leaders to continue to consult the guidelines we issue on specific topics for the purpose of clarifying the responsibilities of organizations under PIPEDA. And we invite them to work with us to fill any other information gaps they may have encountered.

I also want to take this opportunity to mention that data breach notification will become mandatory – and I suspect that will happen sooner rather than later. So I would encourage business leaders to start giving some thought now to how they can bring their processes into compliance. 

Q. Do you have any “privacy-related” predictions for 2010?

A. I don’t think you need a crystal ball to conclude that national security will continue to dominate the privacy landscape in the year ahead. The controversy that erupted over Transport Canada’s deployment of millimetre-wave scanners at Canadian airports was just the first of the privacy-related issues that we can expect to be hearing about in 2010.

And stay tuned for more during and after the Vancouver Olympics. There, one of the big issues will revolve around the pervasive crowd surveillance measures, and what will happen with all the cameras and recordings after the flame is extinguished.

I’ll just mention two other issues of particular interest to our Office, because we will be consulting Canadians on them in the next few months. The first will focus on the tracking, profiling and targeting of consumers by marketers and other businesses, and we’ll be hosting consultation forums on that topic in Toronto in April and Montreal in May. Soon after, we’ll organize another forum to discuss the privacy implications of cloud computing.


Cloud computing in 2010 likely to grow

January 21, 2010

I attended the 2010 Deloitte Technology, Media & Telecommunications Predictions seminar today with my colleagues Adam Herstein and Bruce King. The seminar was designed to highlight the top trends expected to impact businesses this year. Of particular interest to me was the Technology Predictions 2010, in which speaker Duncan Stewart listed seven predictions, including one that cloud computing is “likely to grow much faster than most other technology verticals…”. Deloitte further predicted that “we also expect to see [cloud computing] grow the fastest in the consumer and smaller medium enterprises (SME) market, rather than in the large enterprise and government markets”.

As I previously posted last July, cloud computing is certainly on the rise. The privacy issues are profound and, as a result, we’re spending more time these days working on cloud computing related agreements. In any event, I’d encourage you to review the Technology Predictions 2010 as it provides some great insight that might help your business.


On the lighter side… RMR: A Message From Transport Canada

January 20, 2010

There sure has been quite a bit of chatter amongst privacy professionals about the virtual strip search scanners being installed in Canadian airports. My last post addressed the substantive privacy issues. But on the lighter side, CBC’s Rick Mercer has had some fun with the issue in this supposed “Message from Transport Canada”.  Check it out if you need a good laugh.


Privacy folks crying wolf on scanners

January 7, 2010

Will the virtual strip-search scanners soon to be operational in Winnipeg’s Richardson International Airport be an invasion of privacy? Absolutely. Should they be installed despite privacy concerns? Absolutely.

Read more>>

You may note that the above link takes you to the Winnipeg Sun.  I’m delighted to have been asked by Sun Media Corp. to provide Comment columns like today’s on a monthly basis.  I hope you find them of interest!


Canadian Law Blog Awards Finalist

January 5, 2010

The 2009 Canadian Law Blog Awards, or CLawBies, were recently released and I’m thrilled to be a runner-up in the category of “Best Practitioner Blog”.

It was particularly heart-warming to receive the nomination from fellow Manitoban blogger, Donna Seale (who writes an excellent blog called Human Rights in the Workplace). Congratulations to all of the award winners and finalists. The Canadian Law Blog Awards are a project started back in 2006 with the goal of highlighting great blogs published by the Canadian legal industry. Thanks to Steve Matthews of Stem Legal for his leadership in this regard.

Most importantly, thanks to you for reading my blog and to many of you for your ongoing topic suggestions and feedback. I hope you continue to check out my blog as it develops in 2010! In the meantime, I’d highly recommend checking out some of the other Canadian law blogs profiled on the Canadian Law Blog Awards website.


Monitoring employee e-mail: A privacy primer

January 4, 2010

Since e-mail has become the dominant form of business correspondence, employers have been increasingly forced to deal with issues related to e-mail use, monitoring and access. It’s crucial that organizations stay on top of the legal landscape as it relates to e-mail monitoring, especially as it relates to privacy issues.

Unfortunately, privacy law does not offer black and white answers to the legal issues raised by e-mail monitoring practices. Instead, and like most other privacy law issues, the standard of “reasonableness” rules the day.

I recently penned an article on point (link below) with my colleague Andrew Buck (who is currently completing his Articles at Pitblado LLP) for the Canadian Bar Association’s National Privacy & Access Law section newsletter, Privacy Pages. Our article examines some of the case law and commentary that has arisen from e-mail monitoring with a view towards setting out practical solutions for the creation of “reasonable” e-mail monitoring practices. If you’re interested in reading the full article, please click on the link below.

Monitoring employee e-mail: a privacy primer


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