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Bell Sympatico's 'monitoring' announcement has privacy advocates worried

Bell Sympatico's 'monitoring' announcement has privacy advocates worried

By:  Nestor E Arellano  On: 27 Jun 2006 For: IT World Canada Creator
 

A statement by a major Canadian Internet service provider that it will be monitoring customers' cyber activities for possible reporting to government agencies has sparked concern among privacy advocates.

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A statement by a major Canadian Internet service provider that it will be monitoring customers' cyber activities for possible reporting to government agencies has sparked concern among privacy advocates.

In its new service agreement, which took effect June 15, Bell Sympatico told customers it "reserves the right from time to time to monitor the Service electronically, monitor or investigate content or the use of the Service Provider’s networks."

Bell Sympatico, the statement went on to say, would "disclose any information necessary to satisfy any laws, regulations or other government request."

This announcement is a likely precursor to similar controversial initiatives by other service providers, according to one Canadian academician.

"We will be seeing more and more of this," said Bryan Karney, a University of Toronto professor who investigates the social impact of technology. "If you sign up, it forces you to wave aside any ethical [concerns]."

But in a press statement issued Wednesday afternoon, Bell Sympatico said it "collaborates with law enforcement agencies only when presented with legitimate court-ordered warrants."

"To suggest that we are illegally or routinely monitoring our customers is inaccurate and false,” the statement said.

Karney said the development presents ethical issues that need to be debated, and also raises technical questions on how such a surveillance operation is to be carried out. "I don't know how they are going to do this. With the enormous amount of daily (Internet) traffic, it strikes me a very daunting task to say the least."

These sentiments are shared by other observers as well.

"Lawful access is in the books," said Philippa Lawson, executive director of Ottawa-based Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic (CIPPI) referring to a controversial bill covering access to information by enforcement agencies.

The Modernization of Investigative Techniques Bill was originally introduced in the House of Commons by the Liberals last November. It died when the minority Liberal government fell.

However, the bill is widely expected to be revived by the Conservative government later this year or early 2007. It is this expectation that is prompting "monitoring" programs such as the one announced by Bell Sympatico, privacy activists believe.

Bell Sympatico said in a statement it "does not proactively monitor customers' use of the Service or the content of emails."

However, in the normal course of business Bell Sympatico said it "may be required to monitor certain aspects" of Internet use as it may apply to things such as bandwidth consumption and spam filtering.


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Nestor E Arellano Nestor E Arellano Nestor Arellano – Newswire Specialist Nestor edits and posts newswire content for ITWorldCanada’s online publications and e-newsletters. Nestor joined ITWC in 2006 as a senior writer and ... more

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