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Canada Says Critics Don’t Understand Its Surveillance Bill

They do. That’s the problem.

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Canada’s Public Safety Minister is telling Apple, Meta, and Signal that they don’t understand his own surveillance bill. They understand it fine. That’s the problem.

Bill C-22, the Lawful Access Act, would force telecoms, internet companies, and social media platforms to rebuild their systems so police and the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) can access user data more easily during investigations.

It would also require providers to stockpile metadata on every subscriber for up to a year, regardless of whether those people are suspected of anything.

The bill has the backing of police chiefs across the country and CSIS, who have long argued they are stymied by outdated legislation in a digital world.

The government describes this as organizing information “like a filing cabinet, where certain types of information would be available with legal authorization.”

That filing cabinet contains a year’s worth of data showing where every Canadian goes, when they go there, and who they communicate with. On a mobile network, that metadata includes which cell towers each phone connects to and when. Retained at scale, it amounts to a comprehensive surveillance map of the population.

Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree said at a press conference Wednesday that tech companies are “using this as an opportunity to double down.” He added that “Tech giants are misinterpreting some of the safeguards that are already built in, including on ensuring that encryption is not in any way interrupted as part of Bill-22.”

The list of people who supposedly can’t read keeps growing. Apple warned that the legislation “could allow the Canadian government to force companies to break encryption by inserting back doors into their products — something Apple will never do.”

full story at https://reclaimthenet.org/canada-says-critics-dont-understand-its-surveillance-bill

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