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Information & Ethics committee  The Privacy Commissioner has already told you she doesn't want it--

May 15th, 2008Committee meeting

Prof. Michael Geist

Information & Ethics committee  --so if she gets it, my guess is that there'd be something of a reticence to use it. I think that any person in that position, regardless of who the particular commissioner happens to be, would recognize that ordering another government department to act in a certain way is the s

May 15th, 2008Committee meeting

Prof. Michael Geist

Information & Ethics committee  I don't think so. I didn't think we'd be talking copyright, although I'd be happy to do so. I got into a lengthy debate with your colleague Gord Brown, talking about some of those specific issues. I actually think there is a consistency, both with the concern for appropriate pro

May 15th, 2008Committee meeting

Prof. Michael Geist

Information & Ethics committee  I think it's a question better posed to the Privacy Commissioner, who would ultimately be able--

May 15th, 2008Committee meeting

Prof. Michael Geist

Information & Ethics committee  Chicken? With respect, I try to speak authoritatively on the issues I know well. To give you an opinion when there are people who are better situated to give you one isn't the best idea.

May 15th, 2008Committee meeting

Prof. Michael Geist

Information & Ethics committee  I think we do have a sense of where we are moving from a technological perspective--at least how it's going to impact privacy. There is broad agreement on the fact that there is a scope for greater collection, greater use. Some of that is very good, but there are some potential n

May 15th, 2008Committee meeting

Prof. Michael Geist

Information & Ethics committee  There are a few I didn't highlight because I don't feel I'm in as good a position to make that kind of recommendation. You were talking with a witness earlier about the discontinuance of complaints. I have some concerns about that in the context of PIPEDA. I have similar concerns

May 15th, 2008Committee meeting

Prof. Michael Geist

Information & Ethics committee  As I mentioned, I focused on that, both at PIPEDA and here as well. From my perspective, the Privacy Commissioner plays a critically important role in ensuring adequate enforcement, from both private sector and public sector perspectives. On the private sector side, issuing nothi

May 15th, 2008Committee meeting

Prof. Michael Geist

Information & Ethics committee  I think the prospect of fines and the like may have some impact, but I think a conduct-based order-making power is more essential. Both in a private sector and in a public sector environment, it's the ability to compel certain kinds of action.

May 15th, 2008Committee meeting

Prof. Michael Geist

Information & Ethics committee  My critics would tell you I'm not well informed about any of the above. I would say that I've come to the privacy issue from a technological perspective. What I have found in the five years I have been the chair and in the about ten years I've been at the University of Ottawa f

May 15th, 2008Committee meeting

Prof. Michael Geist

Information & Ethics committee  I think that's right. That's why I focused on things like cross-border data transfers, security breaches, and the like.

May 15th, 2008Committee meeting

Prof. Michael Geist

Information & Ethics committee  Anybody who tells you they know for sure what's in store is probably lying, or just just guessing at best. What has become clear--and we certainly see this from jurisdictions and privacy commissioners from around the world--is that we are collecting ever more data. The ability to

May 15th, 2008Committee meeting

Prof. Michael Geist

Information & Ethics committee  The short answer--and I think for some the rather depressing answer--is that there are no absolute assurances. I think the current environment, where our personal data does traverse national borders with ease, to the point that your information is in different parts of the world,

May 15th, 2008Committee meeting

Prof. Michael Geist

Information & Ethics committee  Certainly you find in countries around the world that many of the standards of privacy legislation are derived from the same basic principles, many of them from the early 1980s with the OECD. The notion of the destruction of documents, that you're going to flush certain personal

May 15th, 2008Committee meeting

Prof. Michael Geist

Information & Ethics committee  Yes. I didn't distribute anything, but I do have some remarks.

May 15th, 2008Committee meeting

Professor Michael Geist