http://www.nationalpost.com/todays-paper/story.html?id=1708435
Proposed bill would give police powers to monitor online activity
Police will be given new powers to eavesdrop on Internet-based communications as part of a contentious government bill, to be announced today, which Public Safety Minister Peter Van Loan, pictured, has said is needed to modernize surveillance laws crafted during "the era of the rotary phone." The proposed legislation would force Internet service providers to allow law enforcement to tap into their systems to obtain information about users and their digital conversations. Police have lobbied for a new law for almost 10 years, saying they need to access "Internet safe havens" for gangsters, sexual predators and terrorists. Privacy advocates and civil libertarians, however, oppose the prospect of giving police "lawful access" to the digital conversations of Canadians by being able to access such things as their text messages
Proposed bill would give police powers to monitor online activity
Police will be given new powers to eavesdrop on Internet-based communications as part of a contentious government bill, to be announced today, which Public Safety Minister Peter Van Loan, pictured, has said is needed to modernize surveillance laws crafted during "the era of the rotary phone." The proposed legislation would force Internet service providers to allow law enforcement to tap into their systems to obtain information about users and their digital conversations. Police have lobbied for a new law for almost 10 years, saying they need to access "Internet safe havens" for gangsters, sexual predators and terrorists. Privacy advocates and civil libertarians, however, oppose the prospect of giving police "lawful access" to the digital conversations of Canadians by being able to access such things as their text messages