Canadian Privacy Protection Law Comes Into Effect 4
Spud the Ninja writes: "The CBC is reporting that under the newly enacted Bill C-6: The Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act, "companies have to ask permission before taking down personal data, they have to tell the client why they need it and who will see it." The
Privacy Commissioner of Canada says that "A person is liable to a fine of [...] up to $100,000 for an indictable offence." As this Act is phased in over the next few years, it will bring the rest of Canada up to the level of privacy protection enjoyed only by the residents of Quebec. Spiffy!"
the international angle (Score:2)
My mom is not a Karma whore!
A couple things. (Score:1)
What about cookies, aka temp internet files? Most internet activity inevitably is going to capture browsing and habitual information that can be used.
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Usable against email address harvesters? (Score:3)
As an interesting test, those that can should create a new email alias and use it as their email address here (easy enough to still read mail that goes through it, but allows detection of where that email came from). If you get any spam-like advertizing through that address, assuming you are canadian, you might have a case here...
Re:the international angle (Score:1)
A shame in some regards, but on the other hand, at least we aren't in the habit of forcing our country's laws on another (see any of the stories about France and the Yahoo Auction sites).