News

Two days after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to suspend all trade negotiations with Canada unless it rescinded the ...
My Globe and Mail op-ed opens by noting that after years of dismissing the warnings of likely retaliation, the Canadian ...
The Bill C-2 lawful access focus has thus far primarily centred on the creation of a new warrantless information demand power ...
After years of dismissing the warnings of likely retaliation, the Canadian government caved last night on the digital services tax. Faced with the prospect of the U.S. suspending trade negotiations, ...
U.S. President Donald Trump announced yesterday that he was suspending trade negotiations with Canada due to the imminent ...
The government’s inclusion of warrantless information demand powers in Bill C-2 has attracted mounting concern, particularly the stunning decision to target everyone who provides services in Canada ...
The government’s unexpected privacy reform agenda includes both lawful access in Bill C-2 and the evisceration of political ...
The government is moving to eviscerate political party privacy in Canada as it fast tracks Bill C-4, proposed legislation framed as implementing affordability measures, but which also exempts ...
Fresh off Bill C-2 and lawful access provisions buried in a border safety bill, the government has now quietly inserted provisions that exempt political parties from the application of privacy ...
Government and law enforcement justifications for warrantless access to Internet subscriber information has long been defended on the grounds that the information being demanded carries little privacy ...