First Test of New Canadian Privacy Act 31
dave_mcmillen writes "In Canada, the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA) took effect in January 2001. An upcoming case will put the act to its first test: Canadian Business Magazine is
reporting that in late May, Mathew Englander will sue Telus Inc. over their right to charge him two dollars per month to have an unlisted phone number. Two other test cases are coming up later this year."
Public or Private? (Score:2)
Ooo... A whole two (canadian) dollars (Score:1, Troll)
Besides, $2 CDN is really not that much. Something around $1.40 US? Even $2 US is not much.
Re:Ooo... A whole two (canadian) dollars (Score:2, Insightful)
[Comedy "Profit!" option here.]
Re:Ooo... A whole two (canadian) dollars (Score:1)
Re:Ooo... A whole two (canadian) dollars (Score:3, Insightful)
-- iCEBaLM
Re:Ooo... A whole two (canadian) dollars (Score:2)
Late last year/early this year, Bell Canada sold it's Phonebook business to a third party. So in Canada, the phone comapnies are not necessarily the book publishers.
Re:Ooo... A whole two (canadian) dollars (Score:1)
Re:Ooo... A whole two (canadian) dollars (Score:2)
Its the principle of it (Score:3, Insightful)
No information about a person should be made public without the person's explicit consent,
Or unless there is a possibility of harming others in which case two or more authorized representatives (judges, etc) should authorize the search of information of the person.
Or unless the party is lawfully (not commercially) authorized based
Re:Its the principle of it (Score:2)
I couldn't disagree more. The government should avoid regulating information transfer between third parties as much as possible, and I think this principle trumphs any inherent right to privacy. Of course, government uses of information have to be restricted to what is neccesary and reasonable, without being overbearing.
Re:Ooo... A whole two (canadian) dollars (Score:2, Interesting)
Differentiate between:
1. Thanks for moving to my neighborhood. If you give me $100, I'll refrain from giving your address to my morally-impaired crack-addict friends.
2. Thanks for subscribing to our phone service. If you give us $2, we'll refrain from giving all of your contact information to our ethically-impaired telemarketer clients. For now.
It's actually a charge for lack of "service" (Score:3, Insightful)
I've been a big follower of PIPEDA since its inception, and have used it numerous times to protect my privacy. Basically, under PIPEDA, all Canadians have a right to personal privacy. Any company who takes your information initially is accountable for what happens to that information subsequently -- even if its being handled by a different company.
However, the phone book is potentially a loophole.
Bell Canada asserts that if you choose to list your name and number in the phonebook, you have chosen to a
Re:Ooo... A whole two (canadian) dollars (Score:2)
The article doesn't state whether that's $2 per month or $2 per year. (The phone book is usually published anually.) $2 per year is nothing worth worrying about, but $2 a month seems unreasonable.
Re:Ooo... A whole two (canadian) dollars (Score:2)
It's per month.
Re:Ooo... A whole two (canadian) dollars (Score:1)
Re:Ooo... A whole two (canadian) dollars (Score:1)
They are charging $2 to NOT perform that service. It is a clasic protection racket. It is definitely unethical and it would be nice if it is also illegal.
Buy a math book (Score:2)
You know, a lot of the baby bells add something like 80c - 2$ for touch tone service to your phone bill.
Let's assume that there are 200m land lines and each and every one is charged with an avearge of just $1 for touch tone service. Well, that's a handy 2.4 billion $ a year as a neat additional profit in exchange for nothing at all.
There's no need to thank me.
Re:Buy a math book (Score:1)
ARG! (Score:1)
Telus is a bunch of bastards (Score:1, Troll)
They subscribed me to extra services without
Re:Telus is a bunch of bastards (Score:2)
As for any of the other problems you mention, I've had nothing but good experiences with Telus. I live in Fredericton, New Brunswick, and get cell service with them, about which I have no complaints, but when we lived in Abbotsford and Mission, (an hour west of Vancouver, for anyone not from the ar
Re:Telus is a bunch of bastards - AMEN! (Score:1, Informative)
Their DSL is a joke.
They advertise "static" IP addresses (for a fee) - but say you have to use DHCP to get it (I guess that they don't know that the 'D' in DHCP stands for dynamic)
In October 2001, their DHCP servers for the province of Alberta were down for two weeks.
A customer of mine has a 4-computer network, linked by a Dlink DSL firewall - he was having DSL problems, and the "support" people at Telus told him that they don't
Down with Telus (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Down with Telus (Score:2)
Re:Down with Telus (Score:1)
i was charged £80 for a twenty minute phone call to the british telecom help desk because they screwed up my bills
oh and i discovered last month that they have been charging me £15 a month for 7 months for a service which BT cancelled because i had to confirm the cancellation with them even though they did not tell me that it was cancelled
I love Canada