Jennifer Stoddart, Canada’s Privacy Commissioner, delivered a landmark speech today at the 11th Annual Privacy and Security Conference in Victoria, B.C.
In her remarks, Stoddart discussed the challenge of technology, globalized data flows and social change. While reflecting on her years as Canada’s “village elder” in the privacy community, Stoddart commented:
“When I took over as Privacy Commissioner, Facebook didn’t exist. Neither did Twitter, Flickr, YouTube, Google Street View, Foursquare, iPods and all the many novel ways in which people now routinely connect with the rest of the world. And it’s not just technology that’s different; it’s other drivers of change as well. Like real-time globalization, for instance, and the instantaneous worldwide flow of data. It’s the way people embrace and respond to technology. Their expectations of what the technology can do for them, and at what cost. Is it desirable, for example, to buy greater convenience at the cost of less privacy? In light of these colossal changes over the past decade alone, it would be foolish to try to predict what the next decade will hold. But what we can say for certain is that the regulatory framework we have in place now for the protection of privacy and personal information is already being sorely tested.”
Read the Privacy Commissioner’s full remarks here.
