Wednesday, July 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Privacy Watchdog Takes Facebook To Court Over Privacy Failures

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Apr, 2019 09:05 PM

    OTTAWA — Canada's privacy czar is taking Facebook to court after finding the social-media giant's lax practices allowed personal information to be used for political purposes.


    A long-awaited joint report from privacy commissioner Daniel Therrien and his British Columbia counterpart, Michael McEvoy, uncovered major shortcomings in Facebook's procedures and called for stronger laws to protect Canadians.


    The commissioners expressed dismay Thursday that Facebook had rebuffed their findings and recommendations.


    "It is completely unacceptable," Therrien told a news conference, lamenting his office's lack of enforcement powers. "I cannot, as a regulator, insist that they act responsibly."


    Facebook insisted Thursday that it took the investigation seriously, engaging in months of good-faith co-operation and lengthy negotiations, as well as offering to enter into a compliance agreement with Therrien's office.


    The probe followed reports that Facebook let an outside organization use an app to access users' personal information, and that some of the data was then passed to others. Recipients of the information included the firm Cambridge Analytica, which was involved in U.S. political campaigns.


    The app, at one point known as "This is Your Digital Life," encouraged users to complete a personality quiz but collected much more information about the people who installed the app as well as data about their Facebook friends, the commissioners said.


    About 300,000 Facebook users worldwide added the app, leading to the potential disclosure of the personal information of approximately 87 million others, including more than 600,000 Canadians, the report said.


    The commissioners concluded that Facebook broke Canada's privacy law governing companies by failing to obtain valid and meaningful consent of installing users and their friends, and that it had "inadequate safeguards" to protect user information.


    Despite its public acknowledgment of a "major breach of trust" in the Cambridge Analytica scandal, Facebook disputes the report's findings and refuses to implement recommendations, the commissioners said.


    "Facebook's refusal to act responsibly is deeply troubling given the vast amount of sensitive information people have entrusted to this company," Therrien said. "The company's privacy framework was empty."


    McEvoy said Facebook has often expressed a commitment to protecting personal information, but when it comes to taking concrete actions to fix transgressions, "they demonstrate disregard."


    The stark contradiction between Facebook's public promises to mend its ways on privacy and its refusal to address the deficiencies — or even acknowledge that it broke the law — is extremely concerning, Therrien said.


    "Facebook should not get to decide what Canadian privacy law does or does not require."


    Therrien's office plans to ask the Federal Court to force Facebook to take action.


    Therrien reiterated his long-standing call for the federal government to give him authority to issue binding orders to companies and levy fines for non-compliance with the law. In addition, he wants powers to inspect the practices of organizations.


    The office of Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains, the cabinet member responsible for Canada's private-sector privacy law, said the government would act on privacy in coming weeks but offered no specific response to Therrien's pleas.


    Erin Taylor, communications manager for Facebook Canada, said the company was disappointed Therrien considers the issues from the probe unresolved.


    "There's no evidence that Canadians' data was shared with Cambridge Analytica, and we've made dramatic improvements to our platform to protect people's personal information," Taylor said.


    "We understand our responsibility to protect people's personal information, which is why we've proactively taken important steps towards tackling a number of issues raised in the report."


    If the application to Federal Court is successful, it could lead to modest fines and an order for Facebook to revamp its privacy practices, Therrien said.


    In contrast, a U.S. Federal Trade Commission investigation of Facebook in relation to the Cambridge Analytica scandal could result in a multibillion-dollar fine.


    "Canada is lagging behind," McEvoy said. "And our legislators need to, I think, wake up."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Court Dismisses Latest Helmut Oberlander Effort To Fight Stripping Of Citizenship

    The Federal Court of Appeal dismissed the latest legal action from Helmut Oberlander, whose case dates back to the 1990s.

    Court Dismisses Latest Helmut Oberlander Effort To Fight Stripping Of Citizenship

    Woman's Angry Health-Care Plea To Nova Scotia Premier Goes Viral - WATCH

    "To the premier of Nova Scotia, I dare you to take a meeting with me … and tell me there is no health-care crisis," Inez Rudderham, 33, said in a viral Facebook video that has been viewed over 1.5 million times.

    Woman's Angry Health-Care Plea To Nova Scotia Premier Goes Viral - WATCH

    New Sustainable Energy Engineering Building Unveiled At B.C.’s Simon Fraser University

    New Sustainable Energy Engineering Building Unveiled At B.C.’s Simon Fraser University
    SURREY, B.C. — Simon Fraser University has unveiled a new building featuring state-of-the-art facilities for a sustainable energy engineering program aimed at clean-technology innovation.

    New Sustainable Energy Engineering Building Unveiled At B.C.’s Simon Fraser University

    Struggling B.C. Adoption Agency Elects New Board That Intends To Keep It Open

    Struggling B.C. Adoption Agency Elects New Board That Intends To Keep It Open
    A Vancouver Island adoption agency that is struggling with a decline in foreign adoptions has been saved from closure.

    Struggling B.C. Adoption Agency Elects New Board That Intends To Keep It Open

    Last Member Of Vancouver Baseball Team That Fought Racism Helps Unveil New Stamp

    BURNABY, B.C. — A new Canada Post stamp honours an amateur Japanese-Canadian baseball team that used sport to battle racism and discrimination.    

    Last Member Of Vancouver Baseball Team That Fought Racism Helps Unveil New Stamp

    Surrey Stabbing Leave 32-Year-Old Man With ‘Potentially Life-Altering Injuries’

    Surrey Stabbing Leave 32-Year-Old Man With ‘Potentially Life-Altering Injuries’
    On April 23, 2019 at approximately 8:07 pm, Surrey RCMP responded to a report of a stabbing in the 13700 block of 97A Avenue.    

    Surrey Stabbing Leave 32-Year-Old Man With ‘Potentially Life-Altering Injuries’