Weekly Newsletter: May 3, 2022

Weekly News (May 3, 2022)

Compiled by Fizza Kulvi, Meaghan Wester, and Nick Gertler with Sara Bannerman, Fenwick McKelvey, Guillaume Dandurand, Marek Blottière, and Kevin Morin
McMaster University, Communications Governance Observatory

The Communications Governance Discussion Group meets every few weeks by Zoom.  Email organizer Derek Hrynyshyn <derekh@yorku.ca> for details.

(April 26 – May 2, 2022)

Canadian News 

·         [PRIVACY/FACIAL RECOGNITION] ​​Privacy watchdogs call for laws limiting police use of facial recognition (National Post) / [PRIVACY] Usage de la reconnaissance faciale; Les commissaires à la vie privée veulent que les corps policiers soient plus encadrés (La Presse)

·         [MEDIA OWNERSHIP] Ottawa asked to overturn CRTC’s approval of Rogers-Shaw merger by advocacy groups (National Post)

·         [ONLINE NEWS] Facebook could block news over revenue-sharing bill, exec says (National Post)

·         [ONLINE NEWS] Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez reacts to Facebook ‘threat’ over online news bill (National Post)

·         [ONLINE NEWS]  Projet de loi C-18 sur les géants du web:La menace de Facebook de couper l’accès au Canada n’impressionne pas Pablo Rodriguez (La Presse)

·         [MISINFORMATION] Selon une étude La mésinformation n’a pas influencé le résultat des élections fédérales (La Presse)

·         [PRIVACY] Conservatives ask privacy commissioner to investigate ‘disturbing’ potential privacy breach of CRA employee whistleblowers (National Post)

·         [PLATFORM GOVERNANCE] Elon Musk’s Twitter bid may push marginalized voices off the platform: experts (Toronto Star)

·         [DEFAMATION] Une publication diffamatoire sur Facebook lui coûte cher; La femme a écrit des propos mensongers sur une candidate du Parti conservateur lors des élections fédérales (Journal de Montréal)

·         [ACCESS TO INFORMATION] L’accès aux documents de Bibliothèque et Archives Canada jugé « déplorable » (La Presse) 

·         [TECH MANUFACTURING] Report finds failures in due diligence of African ‘conflict minerals’ used in computers and cellphones (Globe and Mail)

·         [PRIVACY] COVID-19 patient sues Health P.E.I. for privacy breach at hospital (CBC)

·         [HATE SPEECH] Resident feels ‘relief’ after Confederate flag taken down from Binbrook home (CBC)

·         [COPYRIGHT] OPINION: Geist: The Canadian Government Makes its Choice: Implementation of Copyright Term Extension Without Mitigating Against the Harms (Michael Geist Blog)

·         [DATA PROTECTION] OPINION: Sarantakis: Taking data seriously: A call to public administrators (Policy Options)  

·         [ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE] OPINION: Burton-Bloom: Could ethical AI help underrepresented groups get ahead at work? (Globe and Mail)

·         [ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE] OPINION: Cohn: Social media AIs are a convenient scapegoat for the decline of democracy. But we should look deeper (Toronto Star)

·         [FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION/ PLATFORM GOVERNANCE] OPINION: Philippe Mercure;Une loi pour encadrer Musk et Twitter au plus vite (La Presse)

International News

·         [DISINFORMATION] DHS tries to right controversial rollout of its ‘disinformation governance board’ (Washington Post)

·         [PRIVACY] Online Privacy Protections Gain Traction With Lawmakers, Tech Industry (WSJ)

·         [PLATFORM GOVERNANCE] Another Firing Among Google’s A.I. Brain Trust, and More Discord (NYT)

·         [PLATFORM REGULATION] Biden’s tech agenda gets a reality check as Elon Musk buys Twitter (Washington Post)

·         [PERSONAL INFORMATION] Grindr User Data Was Sold Through Ad Networks (WSJ)

·         [PERSONAL INFORMATION] Thomson Reuters to review contracts, including for database used to track immigrants (Washington Post)

·         [PRIVACY/CENSUS] What Did the 2020 Census Teach Us? We Might Not Know Until 2023. (NYT)

·         [PLATFORM GOVERNANCE] Meta Pledges to Tighten Financial Ad Rules, FCA Chief Says (Bloomberg)

·         [PLATFORM REGULATION] Apple hit with EU antitrust charge over mobile payments technology (Reuters)

·         [CENSORSHIP] Romania must reject Hungary-style anti-LGBT bill, rights groups say (Reuters)

·         [PLATFORM REGULATION] Musk’s Twitter deal stirs fears of abuse in Asia, Middle East (Reuters)

·         [FREE SPEECH] China’s Covid Lockdown Outrage Tests Limits of Triumphant Propaganda (NYT) 

·         [CENSORSHIP] North Korea’s ‘nascent hacker underground’ playing ‘cat and mouse’ with regime (Financial Times)

·         [PLATFORM REGULATION] OPINION: Haugen: Europe Is Making Social Media Better Without Curtailing Free Speech. The U.S. Should, Too. (NYT)

(April 26 – May 2, 2022)

Supreme Court of Canada

  • The Supreme Court of Canada has today (April 28, 2022) deposited with the Registrar judgments in the following leave applications.
    • [INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY/COPYRIGHT] Anderson T. Walcott v. Toronto Transit Commission (Ont.) (Civil) (By Leave) (39992): The application for leave to appeal from the judgment of the Court of Appeal for Ontario, Number C68252, 2021 ONCA 358, dated May 28, 2021 is dismissed with costs.
    • [DEFAMATION] ​​Kipling Warner v. Kevin Hobbs, Lisa Cheng and Vanbex Group Inc. (B.C.) (Civil) (By Leave) (39922): The motion for an extension of time to serve and file the application for leave to appeal is granted. The application for leave to appeal from the judgment of the Court of Appeal for British Columbia (Vancouver), Number CA46644, 2021 BCCA 290, dated July 21, 2021, is dismissed with costs.

Canadian Heritage

Competition Bureau 

Innovation, Science and Economic Development 

Office of the Privacy Commissioner 

CRTC

    Decisions

  • 2022-111 – Canadian Broadcasting Corporation – Sydney and Northeast Margaree, Nova Scotia – Application to change the authorized contours of CBHF-FM Northeast Margaree, a rebroadcasting transmitter of the English-language radio station CBI Sydney

YouTube

Meta

Microsoft

Supreme Court of Canada

  • The Supreme Court of Canada announced today the list of appeals that will be heard from May 9 to May 20, 2022.
    • [SEARCH AND SEIZURE: ELECTRONIC DEVICES] Corporal C.R. McGregor v. Her Majesty the Queen (C.M.A.C.) (Criminal) (By Leave) (39543)   

Senate of Canada

Planned & Possible sitting days this week: The Senate meets all week.

Canadian House of Commons

Planned & Possible sitting days this week: The House meets all week.

CRTC

The CRTC plans to issue the following decisions and/or regulatory policies in the week of 2 to 6 May 2022. This is subject to change without notice.

Broadcasting Decision:

  • Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
    CBQT-FM Thunder Bay – New transmitter in Ear Falls
    Public record: 2022-0104-4

Upcoming hearings

Public Consultations

Public consultations


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