Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada's Electronic Spy Agency Broke Privacy Law By Sharing Info: Watchdog

The Canadian Press, 28 Jan, 2016 11:42 AM
    OTTAWA — Canada's electronic spy agency broke privacy laws by sharing information about Canadians with foreign partners, says a federal watchdog.
     
    The Communications Security Establishment passed along the information — known as metadata — to counterparts in the United States, Britain, Australia and New Zealand, said Jean-Pierre Plouffe, who keeps an eye on the highly secretive agency.
     
    Metadata is information associated with a communication — such as a telephone number or email address — but not the message itself.
     
    The Ottawa-based CSE uses highly advanced technology to intercept, sort and analyze foreign communications for information of intelligence interest to the federal government.
     
    Documents leaked in 2013 by former American spy contractor Edward Snowden revealed the U.S. National Security Agency — a close CSE ally — had quietly obtained access to a huge volume of emails, chat logs and other information from major Internet companies, as well as massive amounts of data about telephone calls.
     
    As a result, civil libertarians, privacy advocates and opposition politicians demanded assurances the CSE was not using its extraordinary powers to snoop on Canadians.
     
    The spy agency is legally authorized to collect and analyze metadata churning through cyberspace, and it inevitably comes across data trails about Canadian messages and calls.
     
    Privacy advocates have stressed that metadata is far from innocuous, as it can reveal much about a person's online behaviour.
     
    In his annual report for 2014-15, completed last year but made public only Thursday, Plouffe said certain CSE metadata activities raised legal questions that he continued to examine and assess.
     
    In a statement, Plouffe said he has since completed that legal assessment.
     
    In collecting metadata, the CSE is required to take measures to protect the privacy of Canadians.
     
    Plouffe said the spy service discovered on its own that certain types of metadata containing Canadian identity information were not being properly "minimized" — removing potentially revealing details — before being shared with the CSE's four key foreign partners.
     
    The former head of the CSE informed the watchdog, as well as the defence minister, about the matter. CSE then suspended the sharing of this metadata with its partners.
     
    After "careful examination," Plouffe concluded that the CSE's failure to strip out certain Canadian identity information violated the National Defence Act and therefore the federal Privacy Act as well.
     
    Plouffe informed the defence minister and the attorney general of his findings.
     
    The watchdog concludes that while the CSE's actions were "not intentional" the spy agency did not exercise "due diligence when it failed to ensure that the Canadian identity information was properly minimized."
     
    In a statement, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan, the cabinet member responsible for the CSE, said the metadata that was shared with Canada's partners "did not contain names or enough information on its own to identify individuals" and that the privacy impact "was low."
     
    Nonetheless, Sajjan said the CSE will not resume sharing this information with partners until he is "fully satisfied" effective systems and measures are in place.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Amazon Says It Is Donating Its Revenues From A Song By A German Anti-Islam Group To Refugees

    Amazon Says It Is Donating Its Revenues From A Song By A German Anti-Islam Group To Refugees
    PEGIDA'S song "Together We Are Strong" can be downloaded for 1.29 euros ($1.4 dollars) on Amazon and has been on its top-100 list for several days.

    Amazon Says It Is Donating Its Revenues From A Song By A German Anti-Islam Group To Refugees

    BlackBerry To Stay In Pakistan After Government Drops Server-access Request

    BlackBerry (TSX:BB) says it will remain operating in Pakistan after that country's government backed off from its request to gain access to the company's servers.

    BlackBerry To Stay In Pakistan After Government Drops Server-access Request

    Toronto Stock Market Looks To Put Tumultuous Year In Rear-view Mirror

    Toronto Stock Market Looks To Put Tumultuous Year In Rear-view Mirror
    The Toronto stock market was poised to settle deep in the red Thursday, closing out what has been one of its more tumultuous years in recent memory.

    Toronto Stock Market Looks To Put Tumultuous Year In Rear-view Mirror

    La Presse Embarks On New Era As Its Winds Up Weekday Newspaper Editions

    La Presse Embarks On New Era As Its Winds Up Weekday Newspaper Editions
    French-language news outlet La Presse bid farewell to its weekday print edition on Thursday as it moves ahead with plans to stake its place in the digital era.

    La Presse Embarks On New Era As Its Winds Up Weekday Newspaper Editions

    Changing Catty Attitude Towards Felines Key Goal Of Canadian Animal Shelters

    Changing Catty Attitude Towards Felines Key Goal Of Canadian Animal Shelters
    There's a good chance that if Spot the dog gets lost after chasing that infernal squirrel through the park and ends up in a animal shelter, he'll eventually return to his master's loving arms.

    Changing Catty Attitude Towards Felines Key Goal Of Canadian Animal Shelters

    Cool Castle: Thousands Of Icicles Create Frozen Fortress In Edmonton

    Cool Castle: Thousands Of Icicles Create Frozen Fortress In Edmonton
    It's now his full-time job to build them back up every winter, using hundreds of thousands of shimmering icicles.

    Cool Castle: Thousands Of Icicles Create Frozen Fortress In Edmonton