Groups surprised at government 'secrecy' over online harm bill consultation - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:17 PM | Calgary | -11.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Groups surprised at government 'secrecy' over online harm bill consultation

Some advocacy groups and individuals who submitted feedback say making their consultation documents public would have ensured concernsabout a "disturbing" and "extremely problematic" plan were heard widely.

Proposal called 'un-Canadian' with negative effect on marginalized, racialized communities

Minister of Canadian Heritage and Quebec Lieutenant Pablo Rodriguez rises during question period in the House of Commons.
Canadian Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez is responsible for the pending online harms legislation. Advocacy groups and individuals who participated in the consultation say they're surprised the government decided not to make the feedback public. (Patrick Doyle/The Canadian Press)

Some advocacy groups and individuals who submitted feedback to the federal government about its proposed online harms legislation say they were surprised the government didn't make their consultation documents public, which would have ensured concerns about a "disturbing" and "extremely problematic" plan were heard widely.

The Liberal government laid out a blueprint last yearfor cracking down on harmful materialposted onlineto platforms such as Facebook and YouTube.

Under the proposed rules, a digital safety commissioner would help enforce a new regime that requires social media companies to weed out child pornography, terrorist content, hate speech and other harmful posts.

It would give the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) expanded powers to obtain subscriber information from companiesand online platforms may also have to report some posts to police and security services.

Canadian Heritage began publicconsultation last summer and anexpert panel appointed by Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguezis now reviewing the topics in the planand is looking for solutions.

It took me by surprise in a really negative way.- Michael Geist, law professor

"I was surprised when I first submitted the consultationand it wasn't publicly posted," said Jenna Scholz, co-ordinator of government advocacy with Defend Dignity, a national organization that works to end sexual exploitation in Canada.

Scholz wrote the organization's submission to the government andsaidshe was curious what other groups had to say about the proposed plan.

"I'm used to submitting for bills, and you can see what every stakeholder says."

"It is embarrassing," said Michael Geist, a law professor and University of Ottawa'sCanada researchchairin internet and e-commerce law, who also participated in the consultation.

Geist said he found the government's "secrecy" over the public consultation documents "odd," as his calls to make them public were to no avail.

We can't let the government risk worsening that pattern in the name of national security.- Fatema Abdalla, National Council of Canadian Muslims

"It took me by surprise in a really negative way when the governmenttook the position that it was not going to disclose the submissions,"saidGeist.

The professor resorted to usingAccess to Information and Privacy laws to retrieve 1,162 pages of raw public consultation feedback emails and lettersand posted them in late April on his blog. In it, he said "the entire consultation process is an absolute embarrassment to the government."

A man in a grey sweater, with papers and books covering the desk he's sitting at, looks at a laptop computer screen.
Michael Geist, a law professor at the University of Ottawa, retrieved and made public more than 1,000 pages of government documents that came from its public consultation last year. (David Thurton/CBC)

Earlier this year, Canadian Heritage released a summary of the feedback from the public.

Though some groups and Canadians expressed support for the proposed regulations, the reportsaid marginalized and racialized groups are particularly likely to be affected by the requirement to force tech companies to quickly remove content that is flagged as offensive.

But that summary report, Geist said, hardly captured the deep concerns raised by average citizens and various entities across Canadarepresenting Indigenous people, sex workers, children, various ethnic groups, civil liberties groups, universities and tech companies, among others who statedthe proposed plan as it stands is "gravely, dangerously concerning," "extremely problematic," "horrible," "un-Canadian in a very deep and disturbing sense," and "an assault on freedom of expression."

Some even warned it can "inadvertently result in one of the most significant assaults on marginalized and racialized communities in years."

The department did not disclose names of the groups they consulted, generally referring to them as "respondents" in its summary document.

"[The government] significantly understated the extentof the public criticism," said Geist.

"The fact so many groups came away deeply troubled and concerned over what it had in mind, I think really ought to serve as a wake-up call."

WATCH | U of O prof explains whyfailure to disclose information matters:

Government should be rethinking approach to internet regulation, professor says

2 years ago
Duration 1:16
Michael Geist, a law professor at the University of Ottawa, says attempts to regulate social media should come with a transparent consultation process, something he says didnt happen in this case.

Groups want their voices heard

FatemaAbdalla, spokesperson for the Ottawa-based National Council of Canadian Muslims, said the organization is gravely concerned over the proposed legislation's use of the term "terrorist activity, terrorist content, and terrorism," and how it will disproportionately affect Muslims.

We will take the time we need to get this right.- Laura Scaffidi, Spokesperson for Heritage Minister

"These terms are the same terms that have led many Muslims to be impacted and marginalized as well as prosecutedand incarcerated post 9/11," she said.

"We can't let the government risk worsening that pattern in the name of national security."

Abdalla says Canadian Muslims who talk about Palestine, Afghanistanor stand in solidarity with diverse movements could be wrongly targeted by such laws.

"I amhearing of that happening now I've seen it on Facebook, I've seen it on Instagram," she said.

WATCH | Group representing Muslims says legislation must strike right balance:

Proposed regulations may have unintended consequences for marginalized groups, advocate says

2 years ago
Duration 1:08
Fatema Abdalla, spokesperson for the National Council of Canadian Muslims, says the proposed legislation is too broad and its terms too vague, which may lead to censoring the social media accounts of marginalized activists.

Scholzsaid her group is most concerned over the monolithic approach the plan takes to targeting the various harms like hate speech and child pornography.

"Trying to couple all of those harms and take the exact same approach is really tough," she said. "I think each and every one of those needs to have a very diverse, specific approach."

Scholzsaid the government must also take steps to prevent non-consensual images being uploadedand verify the people involved are of age and have consented, as it's often "too late" for victims once content is posted.

A blurred-out computer.
Defend Dignity, a national organization that works to end sexual exploitation in Canada, is most concerned over the government's monolithic approach in targeting the various harms. (Shutterstock / Empirephotostock)

Privacy of participants behind decision: minister's office

The heritage minister's office sent CBC an emailed statement saying the submissions weren't made publictoencourage participants to share sensitive information, should they wish to.

"This includes business information shared in confidence by industry stakeholders. It also includes perspectives and stories from victim groups, equity-deserving communities, and other parties who wished to share their experiences facing harms online privately," wrote spokesperson Laura Scaffidi.

"The government is conscious of these limitations and sensitive to the needs of those who participated in the consultation. That is why the government did not publish raw submissions to the consultation."

Scaffidi said obtaining the documents through Access to Information laws was "the appropriate framework," so that confidential information would be redacted and protected.

The minister's office said the expert advisory group will help advise on the future legislation to best address harmful content online.

"We will take the time we need to get this right."