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Group calls for breach rule

Group calls for breach rule

By:  Mari-Len De Guzman  On: 01 Feb 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Privacy advocates have asked Parliament to enact legislation that would require organizations to report and notify their customers if their personal information has been breached.

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Privacy advocates have asked Parliament to enact legislation that would require organizations to report and notify their customers if their personal information has been breached.

Ottawa-based Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic (CIPPIC) has released a white paper entitled, Approaches to Security Breach Notification, detailing gaps in the Canadian legal framework that may leave people vulnerable to identity theft and other fraud.

“It is our impression that many security breaches involving personal information are happening without being exposed to the public limelight because there is a big cost to companies in exposing this, (including) reputational [consequences],” said Philippa Lawson, executive director and general counsel for CIPPIC.

Among other benefits, mandatory breach notification ensures that individuals whose personal information is put at risk can take the necessary actions to protect themselves from possible identity theft or fraud.

While breach notification may be an “implicit requirement” in some cases under various statutes, including the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA), the obligation needs to be made explicit, Lawson stressed. This would give organizations and service providers clear guidelines as to when and how to conduct breach notifications, she added. “Without a law requiring companies to report these breaches and to notify (affected) individuals...there is not as great an incentive for them to have strong security,” Lawson said.

The CIPPIC paper advocated for an amendment to PIPEDA to include mandatory requirement for information breach notification. PIPEDA is currently under review by the House of Commons standing committee on access to information, privacy and ethics.

Breach notification statutes are already enforced in many U.S. states, including California, New York and North Carolina. Companies doing business in the U.S. are mandated, in the event of an information breach, to notify customers living within a jurisdiction that has such a law.

Because Canada does not have an explicit rule for mandatory breach notification, organizations involved in a breach with customers both in the U.S. and Canada may only feel obligated to notify their American customers and not their Canadian clients, according to the CIPPIC white paper.

Mandatory breach notification legislation would provide clear standards for both organizations and customers that can aid in the event that a lawsuit ensues, according to Jason Young, a lawyer for Toronto-based Deeth Williams Wall LLP.

Young said the enactment of a breach notification law would increase the likelihood of lawsuits related to privacy and breach of personal information in Canada. And while there may be parties that will oppose such legislation, he believes many large enterprises that are “sophisticated about privacy protection” will support this move.


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Mari-Len De Guzman Mari-Len De Guzman is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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