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Senators Players Say Viral Video A 'Hiccup,' Team Relationship With Coaches Strong

The Canadian Press, 06 Nov, 2018 12:09 PM
    Ottawa forward Mark Stone says the latest bit of drama in the ongoing saga of the Senators is a "hiccup," and that the team has already done work to repair the frayed relationship between players and coaches that was laid bare in a viral video.
     
     
    Stone said Tuesday that a video showing seven Senators players insulting the team and an assistant coach during an Uber ride is an internal matter, and that it had already been addressed before the clip surfaced.
     
     
    "It's disappointing the way the video got released," he said. "We dealt with this long before this video was released. As a coaching staff, as management, as players it was dealt with internally and the way it should be and we're going to move forward and grow from it.
     
     
    "We don't want negative stuff surrounding our team and this is a hiccup. I think guys have made a great effort to repair relationships. This is only going to make our team stronger going forward."
     
     
    The video was the latest bit of humiliation for the organization, which has endured numerous controversies over the past two years. Owner Eugene Melnyk threatening to move the team, a bizarre alleged cyberbullying incident involving the wife of former star captain Erik Karlsson and sexual misconduct allegations against former assistant general manager Randy Lee are just the tip of the iceberg.
     
     
    It shows the players, including Matt Duchene, Chris Wideman, Chris Tierney, Thomas Chabot, Alex Formenton (since sent down to his junior club in London), Dylan DeMelo and Colin White, discussing their ineffective penalty kill and mocking assistant coach Martin Raymond in what appears to be a recording from a camera mounted on the dash of an Uber driver's van or SUV.
     
     
    None of the players involved, talked about their involvement in the video on Tuesday.
     
     
    "As a leader of this team I want to be supporting my teammates," Stone said. "It's something I never want anyone to go through with it. As a coaching staff and management and players, we're trying to form a bond that turns this team into the right direction and this is a hiccup, but i think we're on the right track of doing that."
     
     
     
     
    Defenceman Mark Borowiecki admitted the Senators would have to deal with the "consequences" and "ramifications" of the video's release.
     
     
    "But we want to keep this in house as much as we can and deal with it appropriately," he said.
     
     
    The players apologized to Raymond in a statement released Monday.
     
     
    The incident has raised concerns about player privacy
     
     
    "We're all totally aware that any time someone says to you this is off the record ... nothing is off the record in your life. So let's get that straight," Toronto coach Mike Babcock said at the Maple Leafs' morning skate on Tuesday.
     
     
    Many Maple Leaf players questioned said it's imperative for players to be aware of their surroundings when having a private conversation. And defenceman Travis Dermott expressed some sympathy for the Ottawa players caught up in the controversy.
     
     
    "I mean, tough bounce for them. They're going to have to deal with that, but it could happen to anyone, really."
     
     
    EXPERTS SAY OTTAWA SENATORS UBER VIDEO RAISES PRIVACY CONCERNS
     
     
     
    A secretly recorded video depicting NHL players venting about team personnel matters illustrates exactly why everyone from governments to companies need to get more proactive about privacy, industry experts said Tuesday.
     
     
    Surveillance and data security scholars said they were not especially interested in the dirty laundry aired among the seven Ottawa Senators players during an Uber ride, but rather deeply concerned about the issues raised by the fact that the conversation was captured and shared without those players' knowledge.
     
     
    The incident, they said, shines a light on the growing ambiguity between public and private spaces as well as the shortcomings of current laws and social practices.
     
     
    Scott Thompson, who studies surveillance technologies and their impact on society at the University of Saskatchewan, said past privacy legislation was crafted around the notion that private and public realms were distinct and could be subject to different sets of rules.
     
     
    "The problem is that with the advance of technology, we're seeing that it's more and more difficult to identify spaces in this way," Thompson said, citing everything from smart home devices to dash cameras in cars.
     
     
    One such dashboard camera in an Uber car captured the off-hours conversation between the Senators team mates on Oct. 29 in Phoenix, Ariz. The five-minute video captures the seven players ridiculing a member of the coaching staff and mocking the team's penalty killing performance.
     
     
    Once the video became public, the players issued a statement apologizing to the coach. They also, however, emphasized that the video was shot without their consent.
     
     
    A spokesman for Uber said the recording was "a clear violation" of the company's guidelines.
     
     
    "As soon as we learned of this situation, we immediately worked to help get this video removed," Xavier Van Chau said in an email to The Canadian Press.
     
     
    David Murakami Wood, Canada Research chair in surveillance studies and professor at Queen's University, said the way the incident will be viewed and handled depends largely on context.
     
     
    If it had played out on Canadian soil, he said the driver would likely be facing legal consequences for making a recording without permission. But laws vary widely by jurisdiction, he said, adding such consequences seem unlikely for the Arizona-based driver.
     
     
    Ambiguity exists in Canada too, Murakami Wood said, adding that there are different rules in place for licensed taxis and privately hired vehicles, with ride-hailing companies occupying a poorly defined middle ground.
     
     
    Murakami Wood, however, said the legal matters around privacy should be treated separately from the ethical considerations put on display in the Senators video.
     
     
    "These people's private conversation has been broadcast to basically the whole world,' he said. "That is undoubtedly a breach of privacy in any moral or ethical sense."
     
     
    Ann Cavoukian, former privacy commissioner of Ontario, called the breach "appalling" and said it highlighted the need for more action across the board.
     
     
    Cavoukian said governments must tighten existing privacy laws, citing the European Union's recently enacted General Data Protection Regulation as a strong international model for other countries to emulate. The office of the federal privacy commissioner did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
     
     
    Cavoukian said companies also need to play a role by tightening privacy protocols, suggesting apps and programs should treat high privacy as the default rather than forcing users to opt in to more secure protections.
     
     
    Both Thompson and Murakami Wood said that while businesses ought to be part of the solution, public attitudes need to shift as well.
     
     
    "Companies should not be determining what are the new norms of society," Murakami Wood said. "We need to be more assertive ourselves by saying, 'no, that's just not socially acceptable.'"
     
     
    He said society as a whole needs to pose fundamental questions, such as whether surveillance tools should be in such wide use or whether information learned outside of a well-defined context is truly open for sharing.
     
     
    Cavoukian echoed the call for a re-evaluation of privacy in the modern age, calling on members of society not to be complacent about what she still sees as a fundamental right.
     
     
    "I don't want people to give up on their privacy," she said. "You cannot have free and open societies without privacy, so do not give up on it. Reject the proposition that privacy is dead. Excuse me. It's alive and well."

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