Time of ‘self-regulation’ is over, privacy czar says in push for stronger laws
OTTAWA — In his most pointed plea to date for federal action, Canada’s privacy watchdog says there is an urgent need for stronger laws to protect personal information — and for more money to help his office enforce them.
Canadians cannot afford to wait several years until well-known shortcomings in the laws are fixed, privacy commissioner Daniel Therrien said in his annual report, tabled in Parliament on Thursday.
Therrien cited headline-grabbing privacy lapses involving Facebook and Equifax over the last year to highlight his disappointment with the government’s “slow to non-existent” response to rapidly emerging threats.
Canada’s privacy legislation “is quite permissive” and gives companies wide latitude to use personal information for their own benefit, he said, adding “the time of self-regulation is over.”


