Canadians985 Archivesfamous for saying 'sorry,' but Mark Zuckerberg's apologies are not ringing true for the northern nation.
The Canadian House of Commons is conducting formal hearings on the 'Breach of personal information involving Cambridge Analytica and Facebook.' On Tuesday, it kicked off two days of political and expert questioning in its Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics (ETHI). Facebook Canada's Global Directeur and Head of Public Policy, Kevin Chan, is slated to appear on Thursday at 8:45 AM.
SEE ALSO: Live updates from Mark Zuckerberg's Congressional testimonyOn Tuesday, Daniel Therrien, privacy commissioner of Canada, spoke with the committee. Therrien called for stronger regulations to protect Canadians' data. And, notably, for the ability of his agency and the election agency's ability to make and enforce orders.
"The time of self-regulation is over," Therrien said. "Transparency and accountability are necessary, but they are not sufficient."
Therrien also informed the committee that his organization is conducting a formal investigation into Facebook, Cambridge Analytica, and the Canadian data firm AggregateIQ that was recently booted from Facebook for its ties to Cambridge Analytica. Cyber risk researcher Chris Vickery also spoke with the committee, in large part to attest to the "porous" relationship between Cambridge Analytica and AggregateIQ. Vickery, Therrien, and the committee appear to be concerned about the use of citizens' data to influence elections and voters. Therrien said he believed that micro-targeted advertising could influence Canadian elections.
"My Facebook feed is full of political ads that I can tell are not from any political party, but somebody’s putting them there," MP Charlie Angus said during questioning.
Canadian Facebook users were not affected as widely as US users by Cambridge Analytica's 2014 data grab, but they were not immune, either. The CBC reported that Cambridge Analytica had the data of about 600,000 Canadians.
"Facebook has made many promises over the years to its users to rectify this or that, to put them in control of their personal information, and this is done year after year for a number of years," Therrien said. "And Facebook is not the only company that acts that way. Which leads me to accountability and responsibility on the part of companies is necessary, but is not sufficient.”
Data privacy in Canada is governed under PIPEDA: the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act. Unlike the US, Canada has "adequacy" status from the European Union with regard to how it safeguards data. But some Canadians and Therrien are calling for reform to PIPEDA, and crucially, the ability to inspect companies, and enforce regulations.
"It is more than time that Canada legislate," Therrien said. "The GDPR, the European regulation, is certainly a good standard to compare ourselves with. But i think it's important for each country to develop its own legislation."
"The main point," Therrien said. "Is it is high time, it is past time, to legislate."
Topics Cybersecurity Facebook
Facebook updates Instagram's nudity policy after Oversight Board recommendationDramatic 'Ginny & Georgia' finale leaves the Gilmores far behindNo, astrology is not going anywhere soonRussia reportedly using 'Pokémon Go' for election meddling is meme goldNew app offers onEverything coming to Netflix in March 2021The Perseverance rover just recorded the Martian windWill this list of sexual cartoon bees finally convince you to start applying for jobs?Photographer makes nostalgia real by Photoshopping his present self into his childhood pictures7 places to find free college courses online, from Harvard to MIT#WomenBoycottTwitter is just another hashtag too late for women of colorHuawei's Mate X2 foldable phone has new Falcon Wing designBogus math question that infuriates the internet was just a trollSony's nextZappos offers to cover the funeral costs of Las Vegas shooting victimsSpacecraft zooms by Venus and snaps a striking imageSony's nextLarry Flynt offers $10 million if you have information that'll impeach Trump#WomenBoycottTwitter: Twitter protest arises following Rose McGowan's suspensionSpotify Free users can no longer cast audio to Google smart speakers, displays LiveLeak is finally dead after 15 years Do you have 600 or more Twitter followers? You can use Twitter Spaces now. Angelina Jolie addresses sexual assault in Hollywood during UN speech 'Pose' Season 3 is a triumphant final strut around the ballroom How to help with COVID How to receive a full refund for your Peloton Tread+ and Tread Peloton recalls its Tread and Tread+ due to growing safety concerns Bill and Melinda Gates are ending their 27 Twitter bans alt Anchor says Sen. Al Franken 'kissed and groped' her without consent We may not need all those fancy disinfecting robots after all 'The Mitchells vs. The Machines' is a vibrant road trip movie: Review Doll gets a creepy makeover, thanks to a grandpa's unfortunate accident 12 best tweets of the week, including abolish lasagna, blue Shrek, and a toot canal The Russian protest artists that will inspire you to #resist EU accuses Apple of anti Amazon's 'Invincible' finale explains that shocking opening Facebook's 'keep us free' plea shows the cost of social media. Again. Scientists diagnose CTE in living NFL player, paving way to treatment Apple's new iPad Pro and iMac to launch on May 21, report says
1.1971s , 8223.78125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【1985 Archives】,Defense Information Network