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Table of Contents
Appendices (Unlinked Appendices available upon request)
Office of the Privacy Commissioner of
Canada
Contributions
Program
Implementing PIPEDA: A review of internet
privacy statements and on-line
practices
Submitted by Rajen
Akalu
May 6, 2005
Centre for
Innovation Law and Policy
Faculty of
Law
University of
Toronto
78 Queen's
Park
Toronto, ON
M5S
2C5
Contributors
Rajen Akalu - Lead researcher, Bell University Manager (Law),
Centre for Innovation Law and Policy
Aniz Alani -
Researcher, JD Candidate, Faculty of Law
Lisa Austin
- Research Advisor, Associate Professor, Faculty of Law
Barbara Bressolles - Researcher, LL.M Candidate, Faculty of
Law
Nadia Caidi - Research Advisor, Associate
Professor, Faculty of Information Studies
Andrew
Clement - Principal investigator, Professor, Faculty of Information
Studies
Sooin Kim - Co-researcher, Librarian, Centre
for Innovation Law and Policy
David Ley - Web
Master, MISt Candidate, Faculty Information Studies
Robert Luke - Researcher, PhD Candidate, Faculty of
Information Studies
Sapna Mahboobani - Researcher,
MISt Candidate, Faculty of Information Studies
Andrea Slane - Research Advisor, Adjunct Professor, Osler,
Hoskin and Harcourt LL.P
This document
constitutes the final project report of an investigation funded by the
Office of the Privacy Commissioner (OPC) Contributions program. A
project proposal was submitted to the OPC on August 13, 2004 and an
award of $48,300 was publicly announced on January 27, 2005 with a
completion date of March 31, 2005 for expenditure of funds related to
the project.
Research was
undertaken by the Centre for Innovation Law and Policy in close
partnership with the Information Policy Research Program (IPRP). This
culminated in a full day conference which highlighted preliminary
research on March 18, 2005. The conference was webcast and included
leading experts in the field of information privacy.
The
central aim of this project has been to evaluate the implementation of
the Personal Information and Protection of Electronic Documents
Act[1]
("PIPED Act") by reviewing privacy policies posted on the Internet by
companies in the telecommunications, airlines, banking and retail
sectors.
Where
possible we have
made use of publicly available information regarding corporate
information management practices and combined this with a discussion of
topical issues facing the target industry sector in light of
developments at the national and international levels.
There
are four substantive papers included in this report based upon
investigations into three federally regulated industry sectors and the
retail sector. Since the PIPED Act had been applied to federal works
since its enactment, we were interested in determining whether
experiences in these industries could be transferred to the retail
sector.
In the absence
of clear
legislative mandate at the federal level to regulate privacy with
respect to ‘all commercial activity', movements at the international
level, particularly the European Union with its Data Protection Working
Party Opinion on information notices and advance passenger information
and passenger name record are likely to have the greatest impact on
privacy discourse in this country.
What
we find is that despite having considerable resources to devote to the
issue of privacy the implementation of the PIPED Act has been
ad hoc
at best and non-existent at worst. Companies it would appear are
motivated to communicate their information management practices in
large measure as a result of business prudence rather than concerns for
individual privacy.
While
might be expected, the unwillingness on the part of the OPC to name
respondents that are culpable of the most egregious violations of
individual privacy even where so doing would be ‘in the public
interest' does little to cultivate the jurisprudence in this area, much
to the chagrin of privacy advocates. The dual role of recognizing
business interests and individual rights with respect to privacy - a
value that is far from absolute results in uncertain interpretation and
application of the Act. Coupled with tenuous legal drafting, this
hybrid of legislative instrument and industry code is at times in many
instances ill-suited to further refine our understanding of the privacy
interest and the consequences of the harm caused by the loss of it.
[1] R.S.C. 2000, c. 5.