Jesse Brown

Jesse Brown

Jesse Brown offers critical thoughts on technology and what it means. Follow Jesse on Twitter:  @JesseBrown

Harper's promise: a warrantless online surveillance state

by Jesse Brown on Wednesday, April 13, 2011 7:56am - 112 Comments

“We are not in any way shape or form wanting extra powers for police to pursue [information online] without warrants.”

That was Stockwell Day, speaking to me in 2007. He was the Harper government’s public safety minister at the time, and his office came into controversy when consultation documents surfaced suggesting that the Conservatives were drafting a “lawful access” crime bill that would greatly expand the powers of police to obtain personal information about Canadians from their Internet service providers without court oversight.

If such a bill were to become law, cops would no longer need a warrant to trace, say, an Internet comment to a citizen’s name, IP address, email address, home address, and cell phone number. In fact, as long as the police had any one of the above, they could request the rest of the info from ISPs without a judge ever considering the need for such disclosure.

But Minister Day was emphatic—my concerns were misplaced, the controversy unnecessary. He had no intention of proposing any such bill. He claimed that the leaked document was a leftover from the previous Liberal administration. He later told the Ottawa Citizen that though such powers would help the police, they were an affront to “our expectation of rights to privacy.”

And warrantless web tracing?

“That is not the path we’re walking down at all, ” said Day.

Two years later, the Conservatives walked down that path.

After a cabinet shuffle, the public safety minister in June 2009 was Peter Van Loan, and he sang a very different tune to me about the need for expanded police powers.

Van Loan tabled a ‘lawful access’ bill that would give police exactly the powers Stockwell Day told me they wouldn’t need. The new minister saw this as no big deal—Canadians, he told me, had “no reasonable expectation of privacy” when it came to this information. In other words, when you leave a comment on this website under a pseudonym, it is unreasonable for you to expect that the police will not be able to trace it to your name, cell number, home address, email address, and other web activity, by linking it to your I.P. address. Such information, he told me, is just like a listing in the phone book.

Others begged to differ. The Ottawa Citizen called the ‘lawful access’ bill “out of balance,” Colby Cosh called it “a bogus, ill-advised expansion of State power,” and the Montreal Gazette called it “unnecessary” and, more to the point, “bad”.

Last month, Canada’s privacy commissioner, Jennifer Stoddart, along with every provincial privacy commissioner in the country, sent Public Safety Canada a letter expressing their concerns about the lawful access bill. Namely, they didn’t see any need for it—ISPs already hand over whatever information police ask for, without a warrant, when the cops claim there is immediate danger or child endangerment. They called the bill “problematic”  and wrote that there was “insufficient justification” for the new powers, suggesting “less intrusive” ways for law enforcement to fight crime.

For years, lawful access has been bouncing around, awaiting debate and modification as yet another cabinet shuffle brought Vic Toews into the public safety minister’s office.  Now the Harper campaign promises us that all their outstanding crime bills will be bundled together and shoved through Parliament within 100 days of a Conservative victory.

It’s a promise to do significant damage to the civil liberties of every Canadian, and one Harper’s opponents would do well to pounce on.

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  • Jake

    Remember, downfall of free speech in Canada under a Liberal Gov't.!

  • Guest

    THIS IS NOT THE CONSERVATIVES THAT ARE WAITING TO MONITOR WHAT YOU SAY ONLINE, IN YOUR TELEPHONE CONVERSATIONS, WRITING IN TO NEWSPAPERS, MAClEANS MAG, OR WHATEVER;

    THIS PROPOSED LEGISLATION BORN UNDER THE LIBERALS AND WILL BE PUT INTO EFFECT USING NEW POWERS THAT THE LIBERAL GOV'T. WILL GIVE TO THE CHRC.

    ITS NOT THE CONSERVATIVES OR THE RCMP THAT WILL MONITOR U.

    DON'T BLAME THE CONSERVATIVES, CONSERVATIVE PLATFORM IS NOT ABOUT RESTRICTING FREE SPEECH, OR INCEASING CORP. TAXES MAKING BUSINESS GO SOUTH LEAVING CANADA WITH NO JOBS AND NO TAX BASE TO FUND UR DEAR NATIONAL CHILD CARE OR WHATEVER UR LOOKING TO LIBERALS OR NDP FOR!!!!

    • John Smith

      Some body's sucking Harper's you know what lol…

  • Crying for Democracy

    Our legislators are leading us down the slippery slope. If we allow them to continue their unfettered actions we soon will live in a world where our every action will be monitored and an international dna bank will exist for our own"security"

  • http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=29529380865 luke charchuk

    Washington (Ottawa) is polluted by money, the sewage of civilization and the economic climate must change. that is the real threat to planet earth. US chamber of commerce is the Everest of dirty money, follow the money and the economic climate must change! . Fight the real parasite that infects us. Bill Mckibben, author on Global Warming — If you want real climate change, get out and vote NOT Harper! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CdF8wz4Jwm8

  • Mad Bro?

    I see what you did there

  • crisKross

    Oh Gawd, cops doing anything they want scares the hell out of me. Cops are just people with guns and people have problems doing the right thing. Always have always will. Cops get pissed off and abuse their power as often as any other demographic group in our society so why the hell would our Gov't give them unilateral power to do anything without going thru the normal channels. I thought I was a Harper man, perhaps I was wrong.

  • Guest

    Its not PM Harper or Conservatives that will restrict free speech, the Liberals will – Conservatism does not restrict free speech, nor business free enterprise and the making of money, creating jobs to make the country profitable and economically viable.

    NDP was and still is not for big business, it never was, increasing corp. taxes only drives businesses south where taxes are lower, result – no jobs here in Canada and no jobs means less tax base to fund all the social programs, that we can't afford, by the NDP and or Liberals.

    • John Smith

      Again what's with the Harper Ball sucking man you pplz make me sick, why don't you just ask George Bush to come here and lead us same thing…

  • Guest

    Remember, its the Liberals, with their great ideas of multiculturalism, which is actually modern day segregation, each group of people staying in their own neighbourhoods, speaking their own language and not integrating well with mainstream Canada; that is multiculturalism which adds nothing to strong unity of our country.
    And remember its the Liberals with their great idea of multiculturalism that, and "we can't offend anyone" that will limit our free speech, not the Conservatives. Restricting free speech is not a conservative value but a Liberal ONE!!!!

  • Anonymous

    Police find a person online doing bad things. They gather this evidence and show it to a judge, who gives them permission to obtain information on this person from their ISP.  

    Bad people still have to deal with the law. Police just have to do police work and show they have just cause. 

    CHECKS AND BALANCES assure it works best for everyone.

  • Anonymous

    Police find a person online doing bad things. They gather this evidence and show it to a judge, who gives them permission to obtain information on this person from their ISP.  

    Bad people still have to deal with the law. Police just have to do police work and show they have just cause. 

    CHECKS AND BALANCES assure it works best for everyone.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Heather-Martin/100002322342051 Heather Martin

    You all have bought the Left/Right paradigm, hook-line-and-sinker.  Wake up and realize that these are the puppets, and the masters simply put in who they need to run the show….. 

  • Beeman

    If any of you Conservative junks had a brain in your head you would see the damage they have already done… The other day I went for an X-Ray I had to pay $60, since when did we have to pay for an X-Ray, also I have a very sick sister half of her meds are no longer covered, I really hope with all my heart that some of the voters for this party get a sick family member to see where the reset of the country are coming from…

    I am a very high paid engineer btw, It just makes me wonder what would happen to my sister if i every took sick or died, also I found it kinda odd how I got a rase on my pay check and the goverment cut $150 off her check, People only think about money and know one else… This country is not becoming a mini USA we are pritty much are… I use to be proud to call myself a Canadian now im not sure if I live in the USA.. Sorry for the grammer this subject piss’s me off so much that I would rather not re read this.

    My ending remark.. three words.. First word starts with an F and ends with a K…. Second word starts with a Y and ends with a U third word is Harper.

  • http://twitter.com/blackbane blackbane

    The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well meaning but without understanding, to declare that in the administration of the criminal law the end justifies the means, to declare the government may commit crimes in order to secure the conviction of a private criminal would bring terrible retribution. – Justice Louis Brandeis

    Olmstead v. United States

  • Denise

    I think it’s pathetic that people are more concerned with which party imposed or introduced this vs how disgusting & wrong it is in so many ways. STOP pittying against each other due to different political parties & start joining as one for a common cause- OUR common good.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Ryan-Greene/100000503194741 Ryan Greene

    You see people this is proof that Prime Minister Stephen Harper is corrupt and does not even care about his own country or it’s own Canadian citizens.

    Know this if you start to notice that you are no longer to speak you’re mind, to worship you’re religious faith etc, or to express yourself then you will then know that you are no longer living in a free society, but in a dictatorship under a psychopathic tyrant named Stephen Harper.

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper is corrupt and is a cold hearted traitor to Canada and the Canadian people.

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper needs to be impeached, arrested and jailed for committing treason and violating the rights of fellow Canadians such as myself.

  • S.R.

    People! No need to argue which political party started it!  Which ever party started it and which ever is going to make it a law is not really as important as the bill itself. We need to do something about it because bit by bit we do loose our liberties!

  • Atchison

    Its disconcerting enough to know that our e-mails (@yahoo.com, @msn.com, @gmail.com and for me @dal.ca) fall under the scope of the Patriot Act because their servers are housed in the US. The last thing Canadians need is the RCMP probing our private correspondance as well.

  • Thwim

    Someone who's decided he's going to devote some time to specialize in the combination of societal-technological issues, and who apparently is good enough at it to get paid for it.

    So probably more of an expert than many of us.

  • Andrew (not PorC)

    Like reality, expertise has a well-known liberal bias.

  • SamDavies

    Totally. He must be a Mr. know-it-all-fancy-pants-big-mouth-idea-talker.
    We have ways of dealing with those types!

  • sourstud

    Meh. I can't get bent out of shape over this. In fact in some ways I see it doing only better than the status quo.

    If the ISP's are handing out this information ANYWAY w/o a warrant when the police request it, having some kind of laws and rules in place governing the practice is better than having none at all, and leaving it entirely up to the ISP's discretion.

    Also, I don't think surveillance of a suspect would even be possible with today's technology without the ISP's handing this information over. Suspects could completely avoid digital spy's by bouncing from one Wi-Fi connection to another. And with smartphones today, people can walk down the street in any urban core and switch networks multiple times in a minute.

    Besides, I'd be quite surprised if they didn't already have another way to get this information.

  • jessebenjaminbrown

    Well here's the thing- right now it's technically cumbersome for ISPs to trace this data, but they do so upon police request in extraordinary circumstances. If lawful access is passed, The ISPs will have to build technology to automate the process and hand the keys over to the cops. After that, tracing "Sourstud" to your real name, email address, and home address will be as easy as tracing a car's plates.

    You're quite right that criminals will evade this- if you know you're breaking the law, there are many ways of encrypting your activities online. But the rest of us will be exposed to any cop who feels like checking us out with a push of a button.

    The cops would essentially be surfing a different Internet than everyone else and most folks wouldn't even realize it.

  • noel_one

    "Big Brother is watching. Beware of Bad Speak." Practice Good Speak." Welcome to 1984. Not freaking likely, thank you very much. This bill would make your entire life an open book to any a$$hole in Gov who wants to dick with you. Filing a complaint with the Police Commission over something wrong you saw a cop do? Guess what, he can now smear your name for nay thing you have said or, done on the 'Net since you first went online. Joined A Cutter support group when you were a young Goth, 20 years ago? Now it's used to slag you for over your complaint. Everything you put on the "net is there FOREVER! And you don't think anyone in 'Authority" who can access anything you've ever done _isn't_ a BAD idea? Are you on drugs? What happens when your boss decides to ask his friend the cop what his employees do online and it is discovered by your staunchly Christian Boss that you belong to a bunch of pagan belief groups? Your job is 'down the road.'
    The potential for abuse is absolutely staggering! Some people, myself included are members of non christian religions that although technically protected from persecution by the Charter of Rights still face bigotry. That is a sad fact in our "enlightened" society.

  • Mike T.

    The more savvy criminals will evade this, but plenty of the regular dumb kind still around.

  • Peter Hillier

    Jesse, not just police, but "public officers" as well. That means, every Director level, or above, in the public service that has some quasi-intel function will be seeking info from the ISPs. Ask the ISP's how they will they turn it into a commodity service? What will the fee structure look like? They will never keep up with the inundation of requests. The overhead will be abysmal. Like I said, I've been participating in the Public Safety forums on these bills for 10 years. The government may throw a bit of money at the large ISPs, but it's one huge sinking privacy ship. Those bills will not get ratified within 100 days; they won't get to 3rd reading in that period of time.

  • Margaret

    Back to letters delivered by private messenger, carrier pigeons, smoke signals – back to the days when people knew someone could be reading their mail. Reason for wax seals. Pony Express anyone? Telepathy, perhaps.

  • guest

    its not the RCMP that will be monitoring our internet, phone conversations, letters to editorial pages of newspapers but the CHRC founded by the Liberals, and if the Liberals get in ur freedom of speech will be lessened and it will be the CHRC that will monitor these conversations, editorials etc. on any comments against anyone in Cdn. society.

    Quit blaming the RCMP, this org. is doing what their mandate is to investigate crime hidden via internet etc. behind the scenes, terrorism etc.

    The Conservatives have not hampered anyone's free speech but the Liberals will with the use of the CHRC.

  • Guest

    u IDIOT, won't be the RCMP monitoring our conversations, & written text but the new found powers given to CHRC to do this and it will be the Liberal Gov't. that will do this. this type of monitoring has been developed and is currently just waiting to be brought to a Liberal Parliament to be enacted under already existing hate laws under the CHRC and the CHRC was formed/born under Liberal Gov't.. The CHRC will be doing the monitoring under a Liberal Gov't.!!!!! of internet, private phone calls, writing in to magazines, editorials of newpapers etc. when one expresses his/her opinions on certain issues.!!!!! NOT INITIATED BY THE CONSERVATIVES!!!! Monitoring speech is not a Conservative thing/platform whatever!!!

  • Joy

    U all should be reading Ezra.Levant.com and his article on the downfall of free speech in Canada.

    Our free speech will continue under the Conservatives along with a new self defence crime bill that will allow someone to protect their property/store/business whatever against criminals and the one protecting their property won't get charged, the criminal will!

  • http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=29529380865 luke charchuk

    there is only a perceived majority being projected by harper media. if you don't believe me check this out: http://www.twiigs.com/poll/Politics/74670 planning on voting conservative or not planning to vote???

  • DiggerB

    I certainly have no confidence that the Conservatives will respect my right to Internet privacy when even on the campaign trail they are using supposedly "private" information from the Internet to determine who can or cannot attend party functions.
    http://www.torontosun.com/news/decision2011/2011/…

    And for those who wish to claim that Harper and his cronies support Free Speech… Could you explain why hundreds of people protesting in the official "Free Speech Zone" were kettled and then arrested at Harper's G20 debacle?

  • http://blog.balder.org Balder

    sourstud 94p "people can walk down the street in any urban core and switch networks multiple times in a minute."

    No matter what anonymous public access point you use, the MAC address of your PC is registered, which is as good as a fingerprint or your street address, unless it is an anonymously aquired pc, which is never used from home, or used without the greatest precautions. Of course it is possible to get around this by using an anonymously bought external router, but how many people will go through all this trouble to post on the internet or at all have the technical knowledge to do this. Besides you'd have to change this router all the time in order not at some point being identified anyway. One needs quit a bit of knowledge to handle this in a secure way. Besides yoyr IP/MAC address, there also are many other giveaways, which will make it possible for authorities to track you down if they set their minds to it.

    But the point is not that a small percentage of the population will still be able to maintain some degree of anonymity under tremendous efforts (post an article; take a walk down the block, install your outboard router, pick a new street every time and so on). The point is, from the government's point of view, that it will keep 99% of the population under surveillance, and let them know it.

    This is not done to avoid terrorism, but to prevent public display of dissent. It works the same way in China. Dissent as such is not the governments problem. It is open, public display of dissent the controllers are interested in supressing.

    The technical side of the surveilance is not the most important; it is the fear the government installs in most people which will keep them in line.

  • GlueBall

    As the late American journalist Ed Murrow had said: "A nation of sheep begets a government of wolves."

  • anonymous for now

    You can change your MAC address anytime, it's easy, my mom can do it. But as long as 99% of people think they can't, you're right, we're right there in China. Next step is you have to "register" your computer/tablet/ipad with the govm't, then they outlaw open wifi, then you have to use your driver's licence to use the wifi at starbucks…Every time a judge makes a decision about the Internet all of these things become more necessary because you have to enforce all these laws now.

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