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Privacy watchdogs call for more oversight over political parties

OTTAWA — Privacy watchdogs from across the country are collectively calling on federal and provincial governments to force political parties to disclose any personal information they have collected and allow for independent oversight to ensure they are respecting the privacy of the electorate.
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OTTAWA — Privacy watchdogs from across the country are collectively calling on federal and provincial governments to force political parties to disclose any personal information they have collected and allow for independent oversight to ensure they are respecting the privacy of the electorate.

In a joint resolution published today, Canada’s information and privacy ombudsmen and commissioners say recent events have revealed some of the ways political parties use digital tools to collect personal information of individuals — often without their knowledge or consent — to target them for political gain.

The commissioners say these increasingly sophisticated big-data practices raise new privacy and ethical concerns and that greater transparency is needed.

In March, federal privacy commissioner Daniel Therrien launched an investigation into the alleged unauthorized use of some 50 million Facebook profiles — possibly including those of Canadians — by Cambridge Analytica, a firm accused of helping crunch data for Donald Trump’s presidential campaign.

Ottawa has proposed some changes involving privacy as part of a bill aimed at overhauling federal election laws, but Therrien says these measures add “nothing of substance in terms of privacy protection.”

He says more action is needed to better protect the rights of Canadians.