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Ottawa finally announces anti-malware legislation

Ottawa finally announces anti-malware legislation

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 23 Apr 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

Canadian-based offenders could face fines of up to $10 million. However, an industry analyst doubts the law on its own will have much effect on most people's inboxes

Almost four years after a national task force tabled its recommendations for attacking spam, Ottawa has introduced legislation it claims will protect consumers and businesses from the most dangerous and damaging forms of malware.

However, an industry analyst doubts the law on its own will have much effect.

The Electronic Commerce Protection Act, tabled in Parliament on Friday morning, would give the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), which regulates Internet and wireless providers, and the federal Competition Bureau the right to charge Canadian-based senders of malware with breaking the law and face up to $10 million in fines for an organziation or $1 million for an individual. The wording, which would cover system builders, forbids anyone from installing a comptuer program on a computer for sale that would send an electronic message without the consent of the owner or user.

The two departments and the federal Privacy Commissioner will be given the power to share information and evidence with their counterparts in other countries to help enforce similar laws internationally.

The proposed act also would give businesses and consumers the right to sue Canadian-based senders of malware.

Canada is one of the few developed nations not to have some sort of anti-malware legislation, so the move is bound to be welcomed. However, the legislation is 68 pages long, so some Internet providers and experts weren’t willing to give detailed opinions Friday until they had gone through it.

The goal is to “boost confidence in online commerce by protecting the privacy and personal security concerns that are associated with spam, counterfeit websites and spyware,” the government said in a press release. “Our government knows how damaging spam can be to Canadians and Canadian businesses and that is why we are cracking down on Internet fraud and other forms of malicious activities,” said Industry minister Tom Clement.

An Industry Canada official who spoke on a not-for-attribution basis stressed that there's a sizable domestic malware business to go after. “One of the big problems we have is that there are a lot of spammers operating in Canada that are sending spam overseas," he said, "so it’s working in both directions: We are getting foreign spam but also there’s a problem of our exporting spam.”

“Spam’s a real challenge because a lot of it comes from offshore,” acknowledged Shawn Hall, a spokesman for Telus, one of the biggest Internet providers in the country. “It’s going to take a unified effort to fight spam.”

However, he added, “we’re pleased with the legislation that’s been tabled today … it provides a legal framework to stop Canadian-based spammers from bombarding Canadians with unsolicited messages and potentially dangerous malware.”

If passed, the legislation will add another tool on top of the anti-spam efforts of Canadian service providers, police in this country and international law enforcement agencies, Hall said.


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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon Howard Solomon is assistant editor of Network World Canada covering network infrastructure and communications issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, he has written for several of IT... more

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