digital rights

Canada’s New Surveillance Bill and What it Means for Your Privacy

A new federal bill introduced in Parliament on March 12, 2026 significantly expands the power of police and intelligence agencies to access your personal digital information. And often without the safeguards Canadians have long relied on.

Bill C-22, the Lawful Access Act, 2026, is presented as a modernization of existing law. But a closer look reveals provisions that should concern anyone who values privacy in the digital age.

Canada’s New Surveillance Bill and What it Means for Your Privacy Read More »

My Face is Not a Public Commodity – Clearview AI Loses Legal Challenge

In a digital world where we share photos of our lives daily, a recent landmark court decision in British Columbia has just set a huge legal boundary: just because your photo is online doesn’t mean it’s public property for any company to use.

The British Columbia Court of Appeal recently delivered its judgment in Clearview AI Inc. v. British Columbia (Information and Privacy Commissioner), a case with massive implications for our digital privacy.

My Face is Not a Public Commodity – Clearview AI Loses Legal Challenge Read More »

Entrapment: Cases That Should Have Gone to the Supreme Court of Canada, But Didn’t!

Welcome to “Cases That Should Have Gone to the Supreme Court of Canada, But Didn’t!”

In this episode, Kyla Lee from Acumen Law Corporation discusses an entrapment case involving online police sting operations—and how the courts are struggling to define clear boundaries for police conduct in the digital age.

Entrapment: Cases That Should Have Gone to the Supreme Court of Canada, But Didn’t! Read More »

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