National Post

Ex-privacy czar denounces lack of transparen­cy over phone-data haul

- Marie Woolf

OTTAWA • Ontario’s former privacy commission­er says she is troubled “by the complete lack of transparen­cy” from the Public Health Agency of Canada over its plans to collect millions of people’s mobile phone data.

Giving evidence to the House of Commons ethics committee, Ann Cavoukian said she found it “disturbing” that data from mobile phones had been collected without actively informing the public first.

Cavoukian, who was privacy commission­er in Ontario from 1997 to 2014, expressed alarm that a request

from the privacy commission­er of Canada to look at the privacy implicatio­ns of the plans was rebuffed by the government.

“Looking under the hood by the privacy commission­er is absolutely essential,” she said Thursday.

She told MPS that although the data gathered was anonymized, questions remain about whether it could be “re-identified.”

Cavoukian said, in general, it is easier to identify people from data in small communitie­s than in big cities.

The public health agency has said the mobile phone data was gathered to help it understand travel patterns during the COVID-19 pandemic.

It said in a statement that it “has not and will not be able to identify or track individual­s using this data.” The data is anonymized and aggregated and does not include personal informatio­n.

In December, it issued a new request for proposals to track countrywid­e cell tower-based location data between Jan. 1, 2019, and May 31, 2023.

The notice said the data must be accurate, accessible and timely, while ensuring privacy and transparen­cy. It must also be stripped of all identifyin­g informatio­n.

Daniel Therrien, the federal privacy commission­er, told the committee in an earlier session that the government declined his offer to advise it on the implicatio­ns of collecting data from millions of mobile phones. The government consulted its own privacy experts instead.

Cavoukian warned that data gathered en masse during a pandemic or a time of crisis should not set a precedent, allowing it to become usual practice. She said protecting personal privacy should remain a priority during a crisis.

Damien Kurek, a Conservati­ve member of the committee, said in an interview that the “government seems to be preparing itself to be able to use this informatio­n in the longer term.”

Canadians have the right to be “very concerned” about the lack of transparen­cy from the public health agency about the collection of people’s cellphone location data, Kurek said.

Members of Parliament passed a motion on Tuesday that called on the government to suspend its plans to extend the collection of mobile-phone location data. The MPS wanted privacy concerns to be looked into first.

The office of Health Minister

Jean-yves Duclos has said the data does not contain personal informatio­n that would identify anyone. It has said its priority is keeping Canadians healthy and safe while upholding privacy standards.

The public health agency said all personal identifier­s were removed from the data before it received it.

“PHAC briefed the office of the privacy commission­er (OPC) in April 2020 on this issue and provided assurances that an analysis was undertaken to determine that the data captured would not include personal informatio­n, and had discussion­s with the OPC again in Jan. 6, 2022,” it said in a statement.

 ?? TYLER ANDERSON / NATIONAL POST FILES ?? Ann Cavoukian, Ontario’s former privacy commission­er, is concerned about mobile phone data collection.
TYLER ANDERSON / NATIONAL POST FILES Ann Cavoukian, Ontario’s former privacy commission­er, is concerned about mobile phone data collection.

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