Weekly Newsletter for March 07, 2023
Weekly News (March 07, 2023)
Compiled by Brad McNeil, Kyle Wyndham-West, and Beatrice Sunderland, with Sara Bannerman and Fenwick McKelvey
McMaster University, Communications Governance Observatory
(February 28 -March 06, 2023)
Canadian News
- [ONLINE NEWS ACT] Google could face disciplinary action after failing to send internal e-mails and rejecting summons for CEO (The Globe and Mail)
- [ONLINE NEWS ACT] Google CEO, U.S. executives disregard summons to appear before House of Commons committee (National Post)
- [ONLINE NEWS ACT] Des députés fédéraux déclenchent une étude sur le blocage des nouvelles par Google (Le Devoir)
- [ONLINE NEWS ACT] Un nid-de-poule sur l’autoroute de l’information? (Le Devoir)
- [ONLINE NEWS ACT] What is Bill C-18, and how could it affect how Canadians use the internet? (The Globe and Mail)
- [MISINFORMATION] Misinformation is hard to fight — but Justin Trudeau has options, experts say (Toronto Star)
- [PRIVACY/PERSONAL INFORMATION] TikTok banned on all mobile devices owned by Canadian government, effective Tuesday (The Globe and Mail)
- [PLATFORM REGULATION] La N.-É., la Saskatchewan et T.-N.-L. bannissent TikTok de leurs appareils gouvernementaux (Le Devoir)
- [PRIVACY/BILL C-27] TikTok slams Ottawa for ban, blames spat between Canada and China (Toronto Star)
- [PRIVACY] TikTok ban should make companies review social media, device policies, experts say (Toronto Star)
- [PRIVACY] Government agency for monitoring social media could be legacy of Emergencies Act report (National Post)
- [INDIGENOUS BROADCASTING] Sandy Lake radio station there to stay after breaking ties with CBC (The Globe and Mail)
- [DEFAMATION/FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION] Law meant to protect free speech from abusive libel suits is misused, says Ontario Court of Appeal (The Globe and Mail)
- [TELECOMMUNICATIONS COMPETITION] Canada’s big telecoms on buying spree of independent providers, raising competition concerns (The Globe and Mail)
- [TELECOMUNICATIONS POLICY] Rogers argues wholesale agreements with Vidéotron not unduly preferential in CRTC filing (Financial Post)
- [TELECOMMUNICATIONS POLICY] Telecom battle goes public, with Bell accused of ‘abusive’ behaviour for double-billing 911 services (Toronto Star)
- [TELECOMUNNICATIONS/COMPETITION] Telus, Bell customers will see roaming fees jump next week. Will others follow suit? (Toronto Star)
- [COPYRIGHT] U.S. producers sue Anne of Green Gables licensing body for right to put on musical (Toronto Star)
- [CYBERSECURITY/ELECTIONS] Stay out of our elections, Canada’s foreign affairs minister tells China (Toronto Star)
- [PRIVACY/CYBERATTACK]Indigo won’t pay ransom after cyberattack from LockBit, malware organization with ties to Russia (The Globe and Mail)
- [ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE] What is ‘woke AI’ and why is Elon Musk reportedly building a chatbot to counter it? (Toronto Star)
- [BILL C-18/ONLINE NEWS ACT] Opinion: Campbell Clark: Google threatens Canada, because it can (The Globe and Mail)
- [PRIVACY] Opinion: Navneet Alang: It’s not just TikTok. The real problem Canada faces is toothless online privacy laws (Toronto Star)
- [PRIVACY/PLATFORM REGULATION] Opinion: Andrew Clement: Our privacy watchdog should be funded by firms that handle personal information (The Globe and Mail)
- [PRIVACY/PLATFORM REGULATION] OPINION: Vass Bednar: TikTok ban on government devices is a distraction (Financial Post)
- [TELECOMMUNICATIONS COMPETITION/MEDIA OWNERSHIP] OPINION: Andrew Willis: Ottawa’s dithering on Rogers-Shaw is delaying a win for cellphone customers (The Globe and Mail)
- [INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY] OPINION: Peter Carrescia: Boosting patents won’t solve Canada’s innovation problem (The Globe and Mail)
- [CYBERSECURITY/ELECTIONS] OPINION: Susan Delacourt: Did foreigners interfere in Canada’s elections? Don’t expect politicians to sort it out (Toronto Star)
International News
- [A.I.] UK Supreme Court hears landmark patent case over AI “inventor” (Reuters)
- [A.I. REGULATION] As A.I. Booms, Lawmakers Struggle to Understand the Technology (The New York Times)
- [A.I.] AI chatbots may have a liability problem (The Washington Post)
- [PLATFORM REGULATION] Les États-Unis envisagent des mesures supplémentaires contre TikTok (Le Devoir)
- [FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION] ACLU urges US lawmakers not to ban TikTok, citing free speech (Reuters)
- [FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION/PLATFORM REGULATION] The resistance to a TikTok ban is growing in Washington ; A crackdown would violate users’ free speech rights, advocates warn. (The Washington Post)
- [FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION] BBC raids show India’s shrinking media freedom under Modi, some journalists say (Reuters)
- [COPYRIGHT] The Supreme Court May Force Us to Rethink 500 Years of Art (The New York Times)
- [COPYRIGHT] if big brands copied their work, what are the artists to do? (The New York Times)
- [DEFAMATION] Fox News Defamation Case Tests Reach of Press Protections (The Wall Street Journal)
- [CYBERSECURITY/PLATFORM REGULATION] Make companies liable for software insecurity, top cybersecurity official says ; The idea has long been floated by cybersecurity experts, but it’s been tough to get it off the ground. (The Washington Post)
- [PRIVACY] Biden Administration Asks Congress to Reauthorize Warrantless Surveillance Law (The New York Times)
- [PRIVACY] Surveillance program needs new protections, oversight board member says (The Washington Post)
- [PRIVACY] Why Countries Are Trying to Ban TikTok (The New york Times)
- [PLATFORM GOVERNANCE/CONTENT MODERATION] Google releases civil rights review, caving to years of pressure (The Washington Post)
- [HATE SPEECH] YouTube, Facebook and Instagram Gave Platforms to Indian Cow-Protection Vigilante (The Wall Street Journal)
- [PRIVACY] Cisco Chief Says Tech Products Must Be Made More Secure (The Wall Street Journal)
- [PRIVACY] Turkey fines TikTok 1.75 mln lira for weak data protection measures (Financial Times)
- [PRIVACY] YouTube child data gathering faces UK scrutiny after complaint (Reuters)
- [PRIVACY] American Firms Race to Meet China’s Data Rule Deadline (The Wall Street Journal)
- [PLATFORM REGULATION/PRIVACY] China to Create New Top Regulator for Data Governance (The Wall Street Journal)
- [PRIVACY/BIOMETRIC DATA] OPINION: Jim Harper: Illinois’ biometric privacy law has created a massive liability regime (Chicago Tribune)
- [PRIVACY/CONTENT MODERATION] OPINION: Bina Venkataraman: A better kind of social media is possible — if we want it (The Washington Post)
- [PRIVACY] OPINION: Harvey L. Pitt: Why Would the SEC Want to Read Your Personal Texts? (The Wall Street Journal)
(February 28 -March 7, 2023)
Senate of Canada
Canadian Intellectual Property Office
Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada
Microsoft
Supreme Court of Canada
- 40317 Glassdoor, Inc. v. Echelon Environmental Inc., Robert Rainford, John Doe (Ont.) (Civil) (By Leave)
- Courts — Dismissal of proceeding that limits debate — Freedom of expression — Matters of public interest — Whether this Court should clarify the analytical framework for determining what constitutes an “expression that relates to a matter of public interest” — Whether expressions that are properly characterized as “online reviews” should be presumptively considered “expressions that relate to a matter of public interest”.
Senate of Canada
- Planned and Possible Sitting Days: The Senate plans to sit this week.
- March 7, 2023 9:00 AM ET Transport and Communications Bill S-242, An Act to amend the Radiocommunication Act
- March 8, 2023 6:45 PM ET Transport and Communications Bill S-242, An Act to amend the Radiocommunication Act
- March 9, 2023 11:30 AM ET Social Affairs, Science and Technology Examine and report on such issues as may arise from time to time relating to social affairs, science and technology generally
House of Commons
- Planned and Possible Sitting Days: The House of Commons plans to sit this week on March 7,8, 9, 10, 2023.
- March 8, 2023 Industry and Technology (INDU) 4:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m. (EST) Bill C-294, An Act to amend the Copyright Act (interoperability)
CRTC
- Anticipated releases for the week of 6 to 10 March 2023:
- Upcoming Hearing:
- March 30, 2021 – Gatineau, Quebec: To consider the broadcasting application listed in Broadcasting Notice of Consultation CRTC 2021-36 View hearing documents (2021-36)
- April 17, 2023 – Whitehorse, Yukon: Call for comments – Telecommunications in the Far North, Phase II – Telecom Notice of Consultation CRTC 2022-147, 2022-147-1, 2022-147-2 View hearing documents (2022-147)
- May 27, 2021 – Gatineau, Quebec: To consider the broadcasting application listed in Broadcasting Notice of Consultation CRTC 2021-114 and 2021-114-1 View hearing documents (2021-114)
Open Proceedings
Public Consultations:
- CRTC
- Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada
- Consultation on the future of competition policy in Canada (November 17, 2022 to March 31, 2023)
- Strategic Intellectual Property Program Review (November 15, 2022 to March 31, 2023)
- Visible minority concept consultative engagement (October 11, 2022 to June 30, 2023)
- Consultation on the Spectrum Licence Renewal Process for Wireless Communication Services (WCS) Licences (January 31, 2023 to March 14, 2023)
- Consultation on Amending CPC-2-0-20 — Radio Frequency (RF) Fields – Signs and Access Control (January 31, 2023 to March 20, 2023)
- Consultation on the Spectrum Licence Renewal Process for Wireless Communication Services (WCS) Licences (January 31, 2023 to March 14, 2023)
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