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Jennifer Stoddart
The United States Congress passed the USA Patriot Act soon after the September
11, 2001 terrorist attacks. It gives new investigative powers to law enforcement
agencies in the US. Section 215 of the Act allows a special court to secretly
issue an order requiring the production of any tangible things to the
FBI. This can include an individuals personal information. Anyone served
with such a secret order is prohibited from disclosing to anyone else that
the order exists or has been complied with. When Canadian privacy commissioners
met in May 2004 in Victoria, BC, a general consensus emerged that exchange
of personal information across borders was becoming increasingly significant
in the context of continental economic integration. The British Columbia
Information and Privacy Commissioner released his advisory report on the
privacy implications of the USA Patriot Act on October 29, 2004. More
than 500 representations were received about this issue including the following
submission from the Privacy Commissioner of Canada.
We live in a virtual world where the global transmission of information
is becoming almost seamless. The operations of governments and corporations
are profoundly transformed by the emergence of e-government and e-commerce.
Electronic collection, use, sharing and storage of personal information
is at the hub of this transformation which modifies not only the way organizations
carry out their daily business but also, more fundamentally, the manner
by which they communicate with citizens, consumers, clients and stakeholders.
The concerns raised about the impact of the USA Patriot Act on the privacy
of personal information about Canadians are really part of a much broader
issue the extent to which Canada and other countries share personal information
about their citizens with each other, and the extent to which information
that has been transferred abroad for commercial purposes may be accessible
to foreign governments. The enactment of the USA Patriot Act may simply
have served as the catalyst that brought these issues to the fore. In Canada,
citizens increasingly recognize the vital importance of personal information
management for good government and sound corporate practices.
The issue of transfers of personal information across borders goes to the
heart of national sovereignty as well as to Canadian identity. As a society,
we must think more broadly about the mix of policy instruments that will
provide an adequate level of protection of personal information as required
by the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA),
the Privacy Act and equivalent provincial and territorial statutes. This
reflection is necessary if Canada is to maintain its leadership in privacy
protection.
Governments across Canada have introduced many measures in recent decades
to protect the personal information of Canadians. Most significantly, they
have developed laws regulating the collection, use and disclosure of personal
information by governments and private sector organizations.
At the federal level, the Privacy Act, which came into force in 1983, regulates
the collection, use and disclosure of personal information in the public
sector by about 150 federal institutions. All provinces and territories
have similar public sector legislation.
Canada has gone one step further by setting privacy standards for information
handling in the commercial private sector. Beginning in stages since 2001,
the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act has regulated
the handling of personal information in the private sector across the country.
Several provinces have enacted similar privacy standards. PIPEDA brings
Canada law into line with privacy standards for personal information developed
by the European Union, and means that our standards for the protection
of personal information, when used by a commercial organization, are among
the most stringent in the world. PIPDEA establishes a progressive framework,
based on the highest international standards, against which to assess personal
information management practices of the public and private sectors in Canada.
It provides a framework for benchmarking best practices and encourages
organizations that collect and process personal information to emulate
those practices.
The Office of the Privacy Commissioner has repeatedly argued over the years
that there is no inherent contradiction between the protection of privacy
and the promotion of national security and public safety. Others have expressed
similar views. Some suggest that a new public policy hybrid needs to emerge
a model that would have Canadians collectively set the terms and conditions
by which sensitive personal information (financial, health and judicial,
for example) would be shared across organizational and national boundaries.
Decision-makers and policy analysts will not be the only ones concerned.
Parliamentarians, civil servants, business and union leaders, civil society
advocates and service providers also need to be engaged in an informed
public dialogue on how to prevent further erosions of privacy.
No one seriously questions that governments and private sector organizations
must collect, use and disclose personal information to do business, run
programs and ensure adequate public security. However, Canadians are increasingly
concerned about the extent to which their governments claim to require
personal information about individuals to fight crime and protect national
security. Canadians are also concerned about how and when personal information
about them is shared with foreign governments and agencies, including police
and security agencies. Their concern centers on the balance between law
enforcement and public security on the one hand, and respect for fundamental
human rights such as privacy on the other.
The transfer of personal information across borders is a fact of contemporary
governance a product of globalized economies, interdependent private
and public sectors and increased international cooperation on criminal
justice and public security issues. The flow of personal information transcends
national and organizational boundaries. It is important for Canadians to
understand these flows of information. When is personal information about
them transferred outside Canada, to whom, and for what purposes? What rules
govern the handling of such information when it has been transferred abroad?
Various rules may apply, depending on whether information is held by a
government agency or by the private sector, in Canada or abroad, by a Canadian
stand alone organization or by an organization whose parent may be in the
United States or another foreign country. When and how can personal information
held in Canada about Canadians nonetheless be made available to foreign
governments? How can Canadians participate in determining the nature of
these flows?
This submission highlights some of the most important questions about the
transfer of personal information across borders, the application of the
federal Privacy Act and PIPEDA and, finally, what Canadians can do about
protecting their personal information in this environment.
How is Personal Information about Canadians Transferred Across Borders?
In our world of globalized economies and increasingly interdependent policy
environments, personal information is regularly exchanged across borders.
Here we explain the many ways in which personal information about Canadians
may be transferred outside Canadas borders in many ways incuding:.
1. By organizations in Canada transferring to organizations in foreign
countries
Globalization has resulted in much more sharing of information held by
companies in Canada, including personal information, across borders. This
is a fact of contemporary life. Canadas largest single trading partner
is the United States (accounting for approximately 85 per cent of the value
of Canadas export trade), so it is little surprise that much personal
information about Canadians finds its way into the databanks of companies
in the United States.
It is to respond to and to attempt to bring some globally recognized privacy
standards to this flow of information that PIPEDA states that transfers
of personal information can only be made if the requirements of the Act
are satisfied that is to say, if the organization receiving the information
promises to protect the information. Organizations transferring personal
information must use contractual or other means to ensure that a company
located in another country provides a level of protection to the personal
information comparable to that which it would receive in Canada if the
laws in that country do not provide for comparable protection.
Organizations in Canada are also obliged to employ security safeguards
to protect personal information against unauthorized access and disclosure.
In some cases, this could mean not transferring personal information outside
Canada in order to protect it from disclosure to a foreign government.
Note that PIPEDA does not apply to all private sector organizations in
Canada. It applies to most commercial organizations in Canada, except where
an equivalent provincial law is in force. If an equivalent provincial law
is in force, that law would regulate the information handling practices
of commercial organizations in the provincially regulated private sector.
PIPEDA is focused on commercial organizations only. Organizations that
do not have commercial activities are not covered. In such cases, PIPEDA
does not pose any obstacle to the transfer of personal information abroad.
Since PIPEDA does not apply to employee records in provincially regulated
commercial organizations, this information can be transferred across borders
without restriction unless there is corresponding provincial private sector
privacy legislation (as in Quebec, and soon Alberta and British Columbia).
That means that employee records from some of the largest companies in
Canada can be transferred across international borders with little concern
for what happens to that information after it crosses those borders.
2. By Organizations in Canada Transferring Personal Information Under Legislative
Sometimes specific legislation overrides PIPEDA and permits commercial
organizations to disclose personal information about Canadians to foreign
governments. Amendments made to the Aeronautics Act in 2001, for example,
permit air carriers in Canada to provide to a foreign state certain information
in their control about persons on board or expected to be on board the
aircraft and that is required by the laws of the foreign state.
3. By Government Agencies in Canada Transferring Personal Information to
Foreign Governments
Canadian law often permits government agencies to share personal information
that is held in Canada (by government or the private sector) with foreign
governments and organizations, even without the consent of the individual
to whom the information relates. Several procedures for sharing information
are described here.
The federal Privacy Act allows personal information to be transferred outside
Canada, even without the consent of the individual to whom the information
relates. For example, the Act allows personal information under the control
of a government institution (for example, information collected to issue
passports) to be disclosed for specific purposes under an agreement or
arrangement between the Government of Canada and the government of a foreign
state. These purposes include administering or enforcing any law or carrying
out a lawful investigation.
One such agreement is the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT) between
Canada and the United States (Canada has signed similar treaties with 33
countries, including the United Kingdom, Australia and France, and two
multilateral treaties also contain mutual legal assistance provisions).
The Canada-US treaty came into force in 1990 and is an important tool for
both governments to obtain evidence located in the territory of the other.
US authorities might, for example, want information held by provincial,
territorial or federal governments, by individuals in Canada, or by companies
in Canada, in relation to a broad range of offences. They can rely on the
treaty to obtain this information. Numerous tax and other treaties entered
into by Canada also permit the transfer of personal information from Canada
to foreign governments and agencies.
If United States authorities want to obtain personal information held by
a federal or provincial government, a company or an individual in Canada,
the usual course of action is to make a request to the Government of Canada
under the Canada-US Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty. Canadas federal Department
of Justice may then apply to a court in Canada for a search warrant to
compel the disclosure of the information. Once the information is obtained,
the Department of Justice transmits the information to the United States
government. Section 7 of PIPEDA permits the company to disclose personal
information that is required to comply with a subpoena or warrant issued
by a court, or to comply with a court order.
Other legislation sometimes authorizes specific information transfers.
The Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act, amended
in 2004, is one example. The Act authorizes the Financial Transactions
and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (FINTRAC) to process and analyze
reports from financial institutions and other designated entities on suspicious
financial transactions. The goal of the legislation is to reduce money
laundering and terrorist financing. FINTRAC has access to national security
databases, as well as those relating to law enforcement. The activities
of FINTRAC clearly involve significant collection and use of personal financial
information about individuals. Furthermore, FINTRAC is permitted to enter
into agreements with similar institutions or agencies in foreign states
for the exchange of information relating to its work.
Another example of legislation authorizing the transfer by government of
personal information outside Canada is the Department of Immigration and
Citizenship Act. The Act permits the Minister to enter into agreements
or arrangements with foreign governments and international organizations
that involve collecting, using and disclosing personal information relating
to programs for which the Minister is responsible.
The Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act permits the Service (known
as CSIS), if it has the approval of the appropriate Minister, to enter
arrangements or cooperate with the government of a foreign state, an institution
of that state, or an international organization of states. Clearly, this
cooperation could involve the transfer of personal information about Canadians.
In many cases where government departments or agencies transfer personal
information abroad, there may be no specific legislation or treaty involved,
but simply a Memorandum of Understanding with a government agency in another
country allowing for the transfer of personal information.
One important role of the Office of the Privacy Commissioner is to evaluate
the privacy impacts of such arrangements and to review the practices in
place to see whether or not the terms of any Memorandum are, in fact, respected.
These audits and privacy impact reviews are vital functions of the Office.
4. By Government Agencies Transferring Personal Information for Processing
by Companies Abroad
Canadian government agencies also sometimes transfer personal information
about Canadians to companies in other countries to be processed there
another byproduct of our globalized and interdependent economies. Relying
on an outside company to process personal information is commonly called
outsourcing.
5. By Canadians Themselves
Canadians themselves give considerable personal information to foreign
governments or companies. Canadian travelers are required to provide information
to immigration officials when they enter a foreign country by submitting
their passports, visas and other records that the country may require them
to supply. Canadians may also supply personal information to companies
when they do business. Registering for computer software support services,
for example, may require supplying information to a company in a foreign
country that provides those services.
The USA Patriot Act
Once personal information about Canadians is transferred outside Canada,
whether by a Canadian government agency, a private organization or by Canadians
themselves, the laws of the country to which the information has been transferred
will apply. Those laws will determine when government agencies such as
the police, security and tax authorities can obtain access to that personal
information. (The same principle also applies in Canada. Foreign companies
that operate in Canada must comply with Canadian laws.) In some cases,
the foreign law may allow access to personal information about Canadians
in situations that many Canadians might find objectionable or inappropriate.
This is why the Office of the Privacy Commissioner participates actively
in international forums where the rules applying to the circulation of
personal information across borders are debated, whether it be for commercial
or government purposes, so that the high standards of information protection
which Canadians enjoy generally continue to apply whenever possible outside
Canada.
The USA Patriot Act, enacted in 2001 by the United States Congress, is
just one example of a law enacted in a foreign country that allows access
to personal information about Canadians that is held in the United States.
The Act enhances access by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to
records held by companies in the United States. The Act amends the US Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 to permit the Director of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to apply to a court in the United States
for an order to disclose records, papers, documents and other items for
an investigation to protect against international terrorism or clandestine
intelligence activities.
If a judge grants an order, a company subject to the order is compelled
to provide the information, which could include any personal information
about Canadians that it holds. Furthermore, the company would be prohibited
from disclosing to others that the FBI has sought or obtained this information.
In other words, the companies cannot tell the individuals that their personal
information has been sought or obtained under the order.
The USA Patriot Act is relatively new, but the concept behind the legislation
is not. The Act is simply one example of a law that can give the United
States government or its agencies access to personal information about
Canadians that has been transferred to the United States. Research done
by the Office of the Privacy Commissioner and discussions with the Department
of Justice suggest that the USA Patriot Act is not likely in the normal
course of events to be used to obtain personal information held in the
United States about Canadians. It is far more likely that existing means
of obtaining such information will continue to be used instead, such as
grand jury subpoenas, national security letters and ordinary search
warrants issued in criminal investigations.
In addition, US government agencies can rely on other established procedures
to obtain information about Canadians that is held by government or the
private sector in Canada. Longstanding information sharing agreements between
security and law enforcement agencies in both countries, and the mutual
legal assistance process, are the most likely vehicles for obtaining access
to information held in Canada.
Governments around the globe have long exercised the right to obtain information
held by organizations within their borders. Many Canadian laws also enable
police, security agencies and government departments generally to obtain
access to personal information held in Canada. In short, Canadian government
agencies can obtain personal information held in Canada about foreign individuals,
just as a foreign government can obtain personal information that may be
held in that country about Canadians. Furthermore, Canadian police and
security agencies can obtain information held abroad about foreign individuals
by using mutual legal assistance procedures and information-sharing agreements.
Whose Laws Apply to Personal Information?
The ongoing discussion about the impact of the USA Patriot Act has highlighted
the confusion that exists about the legal obligations of organizations
faced with an order made under United States law to provide information
they hold. The following sets out the position of the Privacy Commissioner
of Canada on these issues.
1. Organizations Operating in a Foreign Country
Organizations operating in a foreign country that hold personal information
about Canadians in that country must comply with the laws of that country.
For example, if they are presented with an order requiring them to disclose
personal information, they must surrender that information.
This has important implications for the outsourcing by a company in Canada
subject to PIPEDA of data processing to organizations based abroad. For
example, if a Canadian company outsources the processing of personal information
to the United States, that personal information may be accessible under
US law. The broader policy question is whether the Canadian company should
outsource personal information when that information will become subject
to such laws. At the very least, a company in Canada that outsources information
processing in this way should notify its customers that the information
may be available to the US government or its agencies under a lawful order
made in that country.
2. Commercial Organizations Operating in Canada, and not in any Foreign
Country
Organizations in Canada that are regulated by PIPEDA (that is, most commercial
organizations in Canada) or equivalent provincial laws such as those in
Quebec, and soon British Columbia and Alberta, must comply with PIPEDA
or the equivalent provincial legislation. The clearest case is that of
a company based only in Canada and that maintains personal information
only in Canada. Any order made by a foreign government or court (very unlikely
to occur, if the company operated only in Canada) would have no legal force
against the company. The Office of the Privacy Commissioner is of the opinion
that the company would have no legal duty to provide the personal information
to the foreign government, and would violate PIPEDA if it did so without
the consent of the individuals to whom the information relates.
However, as noted above, specific Canadian legislation may override PIPEDA
and permit Canadian organizations to provide personal information to a
foreign agency. Amendments made to the Aeronautics Act permit air carriers
in Canada to provide to a foreign state certain information in their control
about persons on board or expected to be on board the aircraft and that
is required by the laws of the foreign state.
3. Commercial Organizations Operating Both in Canada and in a Foreign Country
The situation is more complicated where a commercial organization subject
to PIPEDA operates both in Canada and a foreign country. Organizations
operating in the foreign country must comply with the law of that country,
just as organizations operating in Canada must comply with Canadian law.
Therefore, as discussed above, an organization that operates in the United
States and that holds personal information in the United States about Canadians
must comply with an order made by a US court to disclose information the
organization holds.
If the organization in the foreign country has a related organization in
Canada that holds personal information about Canadians in Canada, an order
by a foreign court cannot compel the disclosure of the information that
is held in Canada. The organization in Canada will be subject to PIPEDA
or its provincial equivalent. It is not bound by the order made in the
foreign country. Furthermore, it has an obligation under PIPEDA to take
appropriate security measures to prevent the unauthorized disclosure of
the personal information it holds. This may mean employing technical measures
to prevent its related organization in the foreign country from inappropriately
getting access to the personal information held in Canada.
4. Outsourcing of Data Processing by Canadian Federal Government Institutions
If a federal government institution hires a company in a foreign country
to process personal information about Canadians in that country, the laws
of that country will apply to the personal information. A court order made
by a court in that country could compel the company to disclose that information.
Unfortunately, the federal Privacy Act, now over 20 years old, does not
require effective safeguards to be introduced by government institutions
against the misuse of personal information about Canadians that has been
transferred across borders (However, other legislation or contractual agreements
may offer some protection to the information). This is one more reason,
among many, for a thorough review of the Privacy Act.
What Canadians Can Do to Protect Their Personal Information
Canadians benefit from a reasonable standard of protection of their personal
information. They do not want to see that protection vanish when personal
information about them is transferred across borders, and they do not want
to see governments or organizations in Canada transfer their information
across borders if it will be put at risk of inappropriate disclosure, whether
for security or for commercial purposes.
The extent to which personal information about Canadians should be made
available to foreign governments is a complex issue of continuing concern.
Nonetheless, Canadians can take some measures to protect their personal
information from inappropriate disclosure to foreign governments:
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By bringing complaints about the handling of personal information (especially
outsourcing arrangements) to the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of
Canada or provincial and territorial commissioners, depending on the organization
whose conduct has raised the concern;
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By relying on the whistle blowing provisions of PIPEDA if an organization
in Canada regulated by the Act seeks to provide personal information held
only in Canada under an order given to its parent or subsidiary in the
United States. These provisions would protect the confidentiality of employees
who notify the Privacy Commissioner of Canada that a company intends to
transfer information abroad in violation of PIPEDA. The provisions also
protect employees against retaliation by the employers, such as harassment,
dismissal or demotion;
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By letting organizations in Canada that collect personal information about
Canadians know that there is a concern about personal information being
processed outside Canada;
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By taking advantage of the information rights existing under PIPEDA and
provincial private sector statutes which require organizations to follow
fair information practices, notably obtaining consent for information use;
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By reminding companies in Canada of their legal obligation to introduce
appropriate security measures to prevent their subsidiaries or affiliates
in another country from secretly obtaining access to personal information
held in Canada to comply with a court order made in the foreign country;
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By raising their concerns about the potential for excessive disclosure
of personal information to foreign governments or to foreign companies
with their elected representatives; and
-
Generally, by being more attentive to what may be happening to their personal
information when it crosses borders and to the importance of clear and
enforceable international standards on information sharing in democratic
countries.
There is no substitute for an informed citizenry that demands of government
and corporate leaders the highest standards in privacy protection. While
not a panacea for erosion of privacy, civic engagement exerts a compelling
force on custodians of personal information to be more vigilant in adhering
to privacy standards.
What Can Companies Do?
Companies that are subject to PIPEDA or similar provincial legislation
must comply with that legislation. It is important for the management of
organizations subject to such laws to understand their responsibilities
under the laws for example, the obligations in PIPEDA to ensure the security
of personal information. PIPEDA requires personal information to be protected
by security safeguards appropriate to the sensitivity of the information.
Corporate leaders increasingly recognize that maintaining a high level
of public trust in how personal information is handled is vital to achieve
customer loyalty. It is also abundantly clear to corporate leaders that
personal information holdings are key business assets that need to be protected
against misuse.
What Can the Government of Canada Do?
As early as 1987, Canadian Parliamentarians were expressing concern about
transfers of personal information across borders. That year, a parliamentary
committee reviewing the Access to Information Act and the Privacy Act recognized
the extent to which personal information was crossing borders. It concluded
that:
Personal data on Canadians is routinely being transferred and stored outside
of the country by federal or provincial governments and the private sector.
Canadians in particular deserve to know more about transborder data flows
of their personal information in such varied fields such as banking, credit
information systems, credit card services, health care information, labour
unions, personnel and payroll records, airline travel reservations and
general government activities.
The Committee has resisted the temptation
to ask the Privacy Commissioner to conduct and table in Parliament . .
. a special study under section 60 of the Privacy Act, since the resources
and expertise needed for such an undertaking are spread across the government.
Indeed, a number of major government institutions, especially the Department
of External Affairs [now DFAIT] and the Department of Justice, already
have significant responsibilities for the privacy aspects, and other important
aspects, of transborder data flows. Unfortunately, these oversight roles
have not attracted adequate attention and resources in recent years. (Open
and Shut: Enhancing the Right to Know and the Right to Privacy, March 1987,
p. 80).
The response of the Government of Canada to the Committees report was
promising:
The government agrees with the Committee that this matter [the transborder
flow of data] requires study and has already begun to explore the means
by which to determine whether such a problem exists, and if this is found
to be the case, the government will move to address it. (Government of
Canada, Access and Privacy: The Steps Ahead, 1987, p. 13)
Unfortunately, the promise of the Governments response did not appear
to be matched by actions. Now, seventeen years later, after the advent
of the Internet, cyber- government and a renewed determination by all liberal
democracies to fight terrorism and global crime, it would seem timely,
opportune and appropriate to examine the governance of international transfers
of personal information. Such a review would need to factor in the three
years of implementing PIPEDA, its up-coming legislative review in 2006
and an eventual reform of the Privacy Act to ensure that the federal government
practices in handling personal data are kept at the highest standards.
The Canadian government, under the aegis of an Assistant Deputy Ministers
Privacy Committee, is currently examining the robustness and comprehensiveness
of the federal privacy framework which would extend to both the public
sector and private sector activities under federal jurisdiction. As part
of the work of this Committee, the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of
Canada will advocate that the full spectrum of policy instruments, including
public education, contractual agreements and technological solutions be
examined to better protect personal information flows both within Canada
and outside our borders.
What the Privacy Commissioner is Doing
In 2003-04, the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada carried out
a preliminary review of Sharing of Information agreements (sometimes called
Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs)) between Canada and the US. MOUs from
18 federal departments and agencies were examined. The review found that
most of these arrangements between the two countries did not address important
issues such as unauthorized use, disclosure, retention and disposal of
personal data. Only half of the MOUs contained a third part caveat a
statement indicating that information received under the agreement will
not be disclosed to a third party without the prior written consent of
the party who provided the information.
The review also found that only a small number of these agreements (these
can be counted by the hundreds in some departments) contained an audit
provision and that none of these agreements had actually been subjected
to an audit. These initial findings suggest that the sharing of personal
information between the two countries is highly informal, with little oversight
to ensure that the fair information principles (as defined in PIPEDA, for
example) are adhered to by the respective governments.
In the next few years there are several opportunities for a rigorous and
balanced examination and an informed public debate on extraterritorial
flow of personal information. The Office of the Privacy Commissioner of
Canada will participate as fully as possible in these activities. These
include:
-
A planned audit in 2004-2005 of the transfer of personal information between
Canada and the United States;
-
On-going discussions with representatives of the Canadian Department of
Public Security and Emergency Preparedness and the US Department of Homeland
Security on personal information practices of federal entities;
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The creation of a National Security Committee of Parliamentarians;
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The 2006 legislative review of PIPEDA; and
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An eventual reform of the Privacy Act.
The Office will participate actively in coming reviews of anti-terrorism
legislation and service delivery initiatives such as E-government (for
example, the electronic transfer of health care records and similar initiatives.)
The Office will also maintain its ongoing dialogue with industry leaders
and professional associations to ensure that they fully understand their
obligations under private sector privacy legislation. It will also seek
to better understand the practice of cross-border information transfers.
The Office also plans to initiate a dialogue with the private sector in
the coming months about the extent and appropriateness of such transfers.
Conclusion
The circumstances under which personal information held by the private
sector in Canada should be transferred to organizations in other countries
is an important policy issue that needs further examination.
As well, the Government of Canada should reexamine the circumstances under
which it allows personal information about Canadians to be processed outside
Canada. The Office recognizes that this examination involves more than
a simple consideration of the privacy interests of Canadians. It will also
involve addressing the important economic benefits that can flow from outsourcing,
and Canadas obligations under its trade agreements that may relate to
the flow of personal information across borders.
The Commission of Inquiry into the Actions of Canadian Officials in Relation
to Maher Arar may shed some light on the transfer of personal information
about Canadians across borders in national security matters. Other departments
and agencies of governments need to perform a similar examination of the
transfer of personal information about Canadians to foreign governments
and agencies. And they need to explain the nature of these transfers to
Canadians. Canadians need to understand the full extent to which their
personal information is transferred across borders, and the full extent
to which personal information about them can be and is made available to
foreign governments and organizations.
Canadians are not alone in wondering what happens to the information they
give to their governments or to the private sector in an age of instantaneous
global data flow, vigorous international trade, heightened concern about
national security, and increased outsourcing. The Office of the Privacy
Commissioner of Canada has raised the questions discussed here with its
international counterparts. The Office places great importance on fostering
appropriate international privacy standards for the transfers of personal
information across borders.
If Canadians hope to preserve the fundamental values that they cherish
in a democracy, including privacy, they too must ask questions. The security
of our personal information is a collective endeavour. Privacy commissioners
cannot do the job alone. Canadians need to accept responsibility for informing
themselves. Who is using their personal information, and for what purposes?
In an environment where privacy values are increasingly under siege, where
some see the right to privacy as an unnecessary frill, it is not too much
to ask our citizens to stand up for their privacy. In fact, it is essential
to ask.
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