Halton Hills Newspapers

Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 10 Dec 2020, p. 10

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th ei fp .c a Th e IF P -H al to n H ill s | T hu rs da y, D ec em be r 10 ,2 02 0 | 10 WINDOWS & DOORS VISIT OUR SHOWROOM: 11 MOUNTAINVIEW ROAD N., GEORGETOWN, ON L7G 4T3 905-873-0236 www.buy-wise.ca + + Winter Homeowners guide coupon TIRES! All Sizes All Brands 20 Armstrong Avenue, Georgetown We have Anco Winter and All Season Wiper Blades! only $7.49/each installation available ehicles + TAX Most Vehicles $3995 only • Oil Change • Antifreeze Check • Lubrication • 52 point inspection • Battery & Wiper Blade Check • FREE FLUID TOP UPS MAinTenAnce Special!* *Upgrade to synthetic from $15 extra *Up to 5 Ltr. most standard vehicles 905-877-1237 ✃ ✃ 52 point inspection Heavy Duty Diesel Oil Change $149.95+ TAX *T6 Rotella synthetic upgrade $239.95 *most standard heavy duty trucks up to 11L Euro Oil Change Full Synthetic $169.95 + TAX *most standard euro vehicles up to 8L Certified Mechanics specializing in diesel, euro and standard vehicles. Best Prices We Will Work On Any Size or Type of Diesel Vehicle "All Types and Sizes we offer Service, Repair and Annual Safety" lecting anyone's personal information. The Liberals' planned update to the Personal In- formation Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA) was made known in 2019 with the so- called digital charter. That framework prioritized Ca- nadians having access and control over their personal information and data, fair competition in a digital space dominated by giant American companies, and "strong enforcement" against companies that vi- olate privacy laws. Canadian regulators currently have few tools to enforce privacy laws, and few penalties to impose for violations -- such as col- lecting data without con- sent, a situation the gov- ernment plans to remedy with the creation of a data protection tribunal. Kirsten Thompson, a lawyer with Dentons spe- cializing in privacy issues, said technology has out- paced Canada's privacy re- gime, so an update is need- ed. But Thompson said Canada's approach needs to find a balance between the laissez-faire approach of the United States and Europe's more stringent privacy regulations. "I'm not sure we want to go as far as (the European Union), which puts the em- phasis on human rights protection, and I suspect that neither do we want to go in the direction that the U.S. takes, which is laissez- faire capitalism," said Thompson, who repre- sents companies navigat- ing Canada's privacy laws. "Canada is somewhere in the middle of that," she said. "Getting that balance right is going to be critical." It's not clear how the new data protection tribu- nal will fit in with the Of- fice of the Privacy Commis- sioner, which has taken an aggressive stance on priva- cy issues surrounding big tech and social media plat- forms. But Thompson said it would be good to separate the advocacy role -- which Privacy Commissioner Daniel Therrien has em- bodied during his tenure -- from a neutral enforce- ment role. "What is clear is that Ca- nadians want more trans- parency in how their data is being collected and how it is being used," said a gov- ernment report on digital charter consultations. "Current consent-based models with complex and lengthy privacy policies are inadequate and do not help build trust." NEWS Continued from page 8 NEW REGULATIONS NEEDED: LAWYER

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