May 7, 2024 — Today OpenMedia and more than 20 civil society groups and legal experts delivered an open letter to Minister of Justice Arif Virani, urging the government to separate controversial Parts ...
Today, OpenMedia delivered a detailed submission to Parliament's INDU committee, which will be undertaking a study of Bill C-27, the federal government's proposal to update Canada's private sector ...
Laws are sort of like a high school exam. There are rules, expectations, and results. Did you meet the goals? Did you do something wrong? Did you try to get one past the teacher and sneak in some ...
APRIL 24, 2024 — Today, nearly 60 leading civil society organizations, corporations, experts and academics released an open letter to Innovation, Science and Industry Minister François-Philippe ...
Matt is OpenMedia’s Executive Director. His previous work focuses on bridging the gap between good policy and messy political reality, with 5 years experience leading international digital rights ...
Remember all that ruckus earlier this year about usage-based billing? Remember how a bunch of Canadians were really upset about how we pay for internet service in this country? I know, it seems like ...
An alarming number of privacy violations are coming from just one sector of our digital economy. Enabled and empowered by weak privacy laws, these organizations are taking advantage of the Internet by ...
T-Mobile's chic and brash CEO, John Legere, seems to have persuaded the world at large that his company's new Binge On program is an unalloyed boon to the consumer and a thumb to the eyes of ...
New Canadian Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez has now reintroduced a new version of 2021’s Bill C-10, the government’s controversial effort to update the Broadcasting Act and treat the Internet and ...
When you buy a smartphone or a laptop, that device should be completely yours; you ought to be able to do what you want with it. If you drop your phone off the fifth floor, and the screen breaks, you ...
Liberal public safety critic Wayne Easter, introduced a private member’s bill Thursday that would see six MPs and three senators exercise oversight over the spy agencies. Easter had previously ...
Bill C-51 broadens the scope of propagation crimes to include advocating or promoting “terrorism offences in general.” The wording of the bill is broad enough that a terrorist purpose is not required.