Episode 11: Reinterpreting Canadian Privacy Law - David Fraser On Cross-Border Data Transfers, the Right to De-Index, and the Facebook Investigation

Published: Oct. 21, 2021, 2:25 a.m.

b'Daniel Therrien, the Privacy Commissioner in Canada, is in the courts battling Google over a right to de-index. He\\u2019s calling for order making after Facebook declined to abide by his recommendations. And he\\u2019s embarked on a dramatic re-interpretation of the law premised on incorporating new consent requirements into cross-border data transfers. David Fraser, one of Canada\\u2019s leading privacy experts, joins the podcast to provide an update on the recent Canadian privacy law developments and their implications.\\nThe podcast can be downloaded here and is embedded below. The transcript is posted at the bottom of this post or can be accessed here. Subscribe to the podcast via Apple Podcast, Google Play, Spotify or the RSS feed. Updates on the podcast on Twitter at @Lawbytespod.\\n\\nCredits:\\nCBC, Privacy Commissioners Say Canada Has a Lot of Catching Up To Do\\nOffice of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada, PIPEDA and Your Business\\nCNBC, Everything You Need to Know About a New EU Data Law That Could Shake Up Big US Tech\\nCTV News\\nCBC News, Facebook Broke Privacy Laws, Watchdogs Report\\nTranscript:\\n\\n\\n\\nLawBytes Podcast \\u2013 Episode 11 | Convert audio-to-text with Sonix\\nMichael Geist: \\nThis is LawBytes, a podcast with Michael Geist\\nMichael McEvoy: \\nCanada is far far behind I think many jurisdictions. Europe certainly the United States doesn\\u2019t have comprehensive privacy legislation by any means but through the Federal Trade Commission there is some element of regulation of privacy and obviously we\\u2019ve seen that with the latest investigation of Facebook. Canada has a lot of catching up to do in this regard both at a federal and provincial level.'