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Canadians surveyed on digital privacy and police powers

Accepted submission by driven at 2016-11-17 14:44:00
Digital Liberty

A CBC investigative series [www.cbc.ca] is reporting:

"Most Canadians feel strongly about their right to privacy online, but a new poll shows the vast majority are willing to grant police new powers to track suspects in the digital realm — so long as the courts oversee the cops.

Nearly half of the respondents to an Abacus Data survey of 2,500 Canadians agreed that citizens should have a right to complete digital privacy. But many appeared to change their mind when asked if an individual suspected of committing a serious crime should have the same right to keep their identity hidden from police."

Respondents were significantly more willing to grant police powers if a court order was required.

Furthermore:

"Police used to request subscriber information hundreds of thousands of times a year, but that changed in 2014, when the Supreme Court ruled that in the absence of a specific law, police requests to phone and internet companies amount to a search and therefore require a warrant.

Police compare it to looking up licence plate information, which doesn't require permission from a judge."


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