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Canada Privacy News

Canadian Government Scrapping Internet Predators Act 50

dakohli writes "The Conservative Goverment of Canada is scrapping the controversial bill C-30 They will instead make 'modest' changes to the existing Warrantless Wiretap bill. This bill was widely panned by Privacy Critics and members of the opposition. Another victory for online privacy!"
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Canadian Government Scrapping Internet Predators Act

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  • Modest changes (Score:5, Insightful)

    by EmperorOfCanada ( 1332175 ) on Monday February 11, 2013 @06:57PM (#42866827)
    I suspect that by modest changes they mean that they are going to gut our rights. Anyone who works in government quickly learns that control of information is power. It makes them angry that they can't get more information and it makes them scared that we can get so much.

    Exhibit #1: Egypt. They want to turn off Youtube for a month because of "blasphemy" what they really don't want people seeing is the growing discontent that is visibly displayed every day along with the misdeeds of the police; this will work of course because youtube is the only site on the whole Internet that hosts videos.

    We don't need a new internet law we need something at the constitutional level that protects us from government spying while also enshrining our rights to force the government to expose its secrets.
    • Re:Modest changes (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Luckyo ( 1726890 ) on Monday February 11, 2013 @07:14PM (#42866915)

      Ah, another "government is this monolithic entity that is sooooooo scary" post. Massive upmods incoming.

      Reality is, most of these bills in the West are drafted by interested parties. Most of which are no governmental but private in nature. And while many laws look (and are) quite terrible as they are drafted by people with massive vested interests in them, modern Western democracies have numerous checks and balances to thwart such legislation from becoming actual law. Which is what happened in this case.

      The fact that you chose Egypt, a country that essentially survived beginning of a civil war and still hasn't worked itself through it and has never been a democracy befiore as an example of average Western government shows that you're quite pants on the head kind of special poster.

      • Re:Modest changes (Score:4, Insightful)

        by lightknight ( 213164 ) on Monday February 11, 2013 @07:25PM (#42866995) Homepage

        Yes, but that does not alter the fact that many of these bills, introduced to Western society, are totally at odds with its professed values.

        Allow me to show you: "We fought a world wide war to bring democracy / freedom / etc. to people who had it stolen from them / have never had the chance to experience it themselves, against totalitarian dictators / nazis / facists / etc. Skipping ahead to item two on today's agenda, the Chiquita / Dole / etc. corporation would like to overthrow a South American government, duly elected by its people, so that we can buy our bananas for less; btw, we'll be installing a dictatorship in place of whatever they have there right now, it's going to be total hell for those unfortunate people. All in favor, say 'Aye.' *pause* The motions carries!"

        Let's face it: that's f*cked up. And it's not like that kind of behavior has stopped recently -> it has only accelerated, like we're on a tight schedule to f*ck things up as much as possible before we leave this planet. Now, I am not an environmentalist, but I have to pause when I think about these kinds of actions -> they are not good according to anyone who has not had an ethicetomy. Plus I hate being lied to, as much as anyone else, especially when it's the all powerful 'lie by omission' being played.

        • by Cryacin ( 657549 )
          There is an old saying. Throw enough mud, and eventually some will stick.
        • by Anonymous Coward

          Allow me to show you: "We fought a world wide war to bring democracy / freedom / etc. to people who had it stolen from them / have never had the chance to experience it themselves, against totalitarian dictators / nazis / facists / etc.

          You've been watching too much American TV mate. We participated in World War II to restore freedom to other countries but unlike the yanks we didn't use, and aren't using, that "democracy" BS to wreak havoc on third world nations.

      • Re:Modest changes (Score:4, Insightful)

        by wbr1 ( 2538558 ) on Monday February 11, 2013 @07:36PM (#42867085)

        Ah, another "government is this monolithic entity that is sooooooo scary" post. Massive upmods incoming.

        Reality is, most of these bills in the West are drafted by interested parties. Most of which are no governmental but private in nature. And while many laws look (and are) quite terrible as they are drafted by people with massive vested interests in them, modern Western democracies have numerous checks and balances to thwart such legislation from becoming actual law. Which is what happened in this case.

        The fact that you chose Egypt, a country that essentially survived beginning of a civil war and still hasn't worked itself through it and has never been a democracy befiore as an example of average Western government shows that you're quite pants on the head kind of special poster.

        However, those checks and balances are skewed. The interested parties (military industrial complex anyone? what the US spends most of its budget on), want these things to pass. They are their bread and butter. These laws do get passed (DMCA, Patriot Act, et al), and many that don't will rise again, and again with new names attached, until either enough money has changed hands to make it feasible, or wrapped into some save us from drug/terrorists/pedos monstrosity named some stupid shit (PLBAFOWO - Protect Little Boys Anuses from Osama Wannabes Online), then they will pass and one more right will be gone. One more piece of your privacy eroded.

        Meanwhile you will blithly watch your superbowl and say oh the checks and balances will get it. I can still afford my mortgage and comcast bill. Who gives a fuck?

        There are are two types of people in the the western world for the most part. Those who drink the koolaid that the gov works as is and ignore it, and those who by the gov line of saving you from yourselves and the evils around you. The fact is both are false, and those who see it are in theminority, and slowly becoming more and more shut out of anything.

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by Anonymous Coward

          The interested parties (military industrial complex anyone? what the US spends most of its budget on)

          Actually, Medicare, Medicaid, and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) - together accounted for 21 percent of the budget. Defense and international security assistance was 20 percent... tied with Social Security. A fair breakdown can be had here. http://www.cbpp.org/cms/index.cfm?fa=view&id=1258 [cbpp.org]

          • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

            That "fair" breakdown, from a legal perspective, is, in fact, an outright lie. It claims that Medicare and Social Security trust fund payments to individuals are part of the federal budget. According to 42 USC section 911 paragraph (a) [cornell.edu], payments from those trust funds are NOT considered part of the federal budget. There's simply no grey area or ambiguity here. They aren't part of the federal budget, and anyone who says otherwise is lying to push a political agenda.

            Calling Medicare and Social Security pa

        • The US hasn't had a budget since some time in 2010. Last budget was passed in April 2009.

      • Re:Modest changes (Score:5, Informative)

        by blahplusplus ( 757119 ) on Monday February 11, 2013 @07:57PM (#42867229)

        "Ah, another "government is this monolithic entity that is sooooooo scary" post. Massive upmods incoming."

        If you knew anything about the history of the current conservative party (reform party take over) you would not be saying such things. Most people commenting in this thread know nothing about canadian politics and how the canadian parliamentary system works. Right now Conservatives have a majority, what that means is they essentially get to shove any legislation they want through with impunity.

        Whether they 'slightly soften' totally bankrupt laws is a non issue since the opposition has no power at all given the majority.

        • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

          Right now Conservatives have a majority, what that means is they essentially get to shove any legislation they want through with impunity.

          If that was true, the free speech bill(C-304) [brianstorseth.ca] wouldn't be stalled in the senate. And this is a bill that has strong support from all sides of the political spectrum. A majority means squat in politics in Canada being that the senate has it's own whims and can stall and kill something as it wants.

          • "If that was true, the free speech bill(C-304) [brianstorseth.ca] wouldn't be stalled in the senate."

            You've missed the point COMPLETELY who has control of the senate asshole? Oh yeah conservatives. CONSERVATIVES Stalling bills means nothing when they'll just keep waiting out public scrutiny on many issues. You know nothing of how the government works obviously.

            http://www.cannabisculture.com/content/2011/12/06/Draconian-Crime-Bill-Passed-Conservative-Majority-House-Commons [cannabisculture.com]

            • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

              Oh hey there kid. Apparently you don't understand how the unelected senate works in Canada let alone the government, but takes the face value of pot weekly magazine at face value.

              • Thanks for letting your ignorance shine through you hack.

                The Senate (that house of sober second thought) can not kill a bill. It can send it back to the commons but it can not kill it. If the commons wants it, it will eventually receive Royal Assent and become law. The Senate, at best, can only delay.

          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            When was the last time that the Senate actually killed a bill that a majority government wanted? Remember NAFTA? The GST? Mulroney appointing a bunch of new senators to shove his laws through? The electorate wiping out the PCs?
            Harper is a smart politician so pretends the Senate has more power then it does.

            • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

              SOPA comes to mind as a good example. Thing is, it doesn't have to be legislative body to kill it. Citizen action, lobbying and so on are very effective to take legislative packages off the table because of fear of consequences.

              In EU, same thing happened to patent directive for example.

            • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

              When was the last time that the Senate actually killed a bill that a majority government wanted?

              The first round of the gun registry. Useful tip it was stacked with liberals at the time. Second thing, every PM shoves in new senators. Though the liberals have been in power the majority of the time in Canada in turn they've have a disproportionate number of senators in power. Third thing, Harper has been attempting to get the senate reformed for his last three mandates, and the liberals and quebec have been throwing a hissy fit over the entire thing. Because he wants an elected senate--you know just

              • Really? When I asked one of his staff about this policy in writing I was called a 'dipper' communist. I'd share but privacy, you know.

              • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

                Third thing, Harper has been attempting to get the senate reformed for his last three mandates, and the liberals and quebec have been throwing a hissy fit over the entire thing. Because he wants an elected senate--you know just like MP's.

                Funny thing that. Harper's been in power for 7 years now, and he's done didly, except appoint more senators. Yes, Harper, the one true person who wanted to usher in elected senators, has become the PM to appoint the most senators. Heck, he even ignored Alberta's (his home p

          • by Argilo ( 602972 )
            The Canadian Senate has very little power and influence. And in any case, the Conservative Party currently holds a majority in the senate, making it very unlikely that the Senate would attempt to block a bill passed by the House.
        • by J Story ( 30227 )

          "Ah, another "government is this monolithic entity that is sooooooo scary" post. Massive upmods incoming."

          If you knew anything about the history of the current conservative party (reform party take over) you would not be saying such things. Most people commenting in this thread know nothing about canadian politics and how the canadian parliamentary system works. Right now Conservatives have a majority, what that means is they essentially get to shove any legislation they want through with impunity.

          Whether they 'slightly soften' totally bankrupt laws is a non issue since the opposition has no power at all given the majority.

          The poster has apparently not seen the memo where it is explained that the Conservatives scary "Hidden Agenda" doesn't actually exist. The fact is that the Conservatives have had a majority for a couple years, and yet, incredibly, the sky has not fallen and the black helicopters have failed to appear. What's more, the retreat from the bill in question shows that the Conservatives do pay attention when people shout loud enough.

          All in all, the Conservatives have been handling their mandate with an astounding

          • Oh stop, you are such a partisan hack you wouldn't know wtf you're talking about.

            http://www.cbc.ca/canadavotes2004/leadersparties/leaders/pdf/firewall.pdf [www.cbc.ca]

          • by Dr. Evil ( 3501 )

            "the sky has not fallen and the black helicopters have failed to appear"

            Somebody missed the G20.

            Harper doesn't give a rat's ass about civil liberties, the environment, or even the long term well being of the country. The "Secret agenda" is no secret at all.

            He's an intelligent man with a morally reprehensible, narrow and ruthless ideology. Despite majority government, his power is not unlimited... he has to act within the constitution and the interests of the political future of his party members.

      • shows that you're quite pants on the head kind of special poster.

        I don't understand this at all but I'm guessing it's a hilarious burn.

      • Actually I am not not referring to government as a big scary conspiracy. The knee jerk reaction to controlling information goes right down to the individual. One of the worst nightmares of any manager is that their underling is a golfing partner with that manager's boss. Quite simply they have lost information control. The manager has a project where things aren't going perfectly and they worry that the underling might say something like "That project is a disaster. Why just the other week we fell even fart
        • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

          The problem with your line of thinking is that you're thinking it's a one way street when it's a two way one. Government is also massively limited by laws, at least in the Western democracy model (not Egypt for example). Private interests are far, FAR less limited, such as not having to honor free speech or transparency to anywhere near the levels of government.

          As a result, governmental mistakes come to light far more often then private ones, in spite of the fact that most of the new legislation is driven b

          • I would love to see limits to what data companies can collect, store, and share. I would also love to see greater disclosure laws for companies, especially as they get larger. The best parts of big lawsuits like those against big tobacco were when many of their dirty little secrets came out. But with lobbying as it is now that's never going to happen.

            As a public good I can't think of many situations where forcing large companies to disclose much of what they do would be harmful. If a company has to discl
            • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

              You're not going to, and this is in large part because of attitude of people like you. You view government as a bigger threat to yourself then corporate interests. This in spite of the fact that governments across Western countries are far more regulated, far more people-oriented, have a legal and moral requirement (usually echoed by most of the government employees) to help their citizens.

              "Well I see a hunter with a gun and an angry bear on my right and left sides. I'd better run to the bear for safety bec

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Never underestimate laziness. Laziness leading to malice.

      The original internet surveillance bill was brought in because "police want tools to fight X,Y,Z". What it really means is that people are lazy and they don't want to explain to a judge why they need something. They just want to flip a switch, CSI style, and don't give a damn. And if they can't flip a switch, they'll just say they are overworked, etc. etc.

      Of course these people that have this capability can use it for both good and evil. And police ca

    • Re:Modest changes (Score:5, Informative)

      by Mashiki ( 184564 ) <mashiki@gmail.cBALDWINom minus author> on Monday February 11, 2013 @07:50PM (#42867187) Homepage

      I suspect that by modest changes they mean that they are going to gut our rights. Anyone who works in government quickly learns that control of information is power. It makes them angry that they can't get more information and it makes them scared that we can get so much.

      Well, my first question is do you actually live in Canada? If you did you'd already know that the SCC has a history of upholding the charter of rights and freedoms against intrusive laws unless the government can justifiably demonstrate that there is a valid S.1 argument [justice.gc.ca]. And there have been very few cases where the SCC has let the S.1 argument give leeway. Probably the best case to show where the government has been given leeway under that is the RIDE Program [wikipedia.org], where warrentless stopping of a vehicle is considered a small enough violation of public rights vs the protection of society as a whole.

      Remember now, that this has already been to court in terms of the warrentless wiretap, and the SCC struck it down as an overeach of power. This bill is to come into compliance to the SCC's ruling, it will end up being challenged again, and if the bill is found to be in breach or an excessive overreach the SCC will strike it down again.

    • by mjr167 ( 2477430 )

      We don't need a new internet law we need something at the constitutional level that protects us from government spying while also enshrining our rights to force the government to expose its secrets.

      You mean something like the 4th amendment?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    What they mean by 'they will instead make modest changes to' is 'we will change the name of this and insert it wholly unchanged into this other legislation'.

    • by EzInKy ( 115248 )

      What, you didn't notice that the "an" in paragraph 192 was corrected to "a"?

    • by green1 ( 322787 )

      Granted I haven't read the whole thing, but so far the changes amount to somewhat reasonable ones, assuming they don't get twisted any further.
      What they've put in to the other bill is that Police (but not simply "peace officers") can do warrentless wire tapping only when an imminent threat is detected, further, they must tell the party within 90 days that this happened, and they must report all incidents of such.

      I don't like warrentless wiretapping at all. but there does need to be some leeway for how to ap

  • Omnibus bill (Score:5, Insightful)

    by CanadianMacFan ( 1900244 ) on Monday February 11, 2013 @08:47PM (#42867547)
    Probably everything will get thrown into the next budget omnibus bill which will pass and then we'll only find out six months later what was contained in it.

A committee takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom. -- Parkinson

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