Liberals Facing Backlash over Privacy Concerns After Introducing 'Safe Social Media Act'
6 Articles
6 Articles
Western Standard: Safe Social Media Act — if Ottawa will not trust in parents, it must trust in surveillance
Bill C-34, the Safe Social Media Act, will implement a social media ban on all Canadians under age 16 in the name of protecting children from online harms. It will be for the federal Cabinet to determine which social media platforms are affected, and it will fall to social media platforms swept within the ambit of […]
Bill C–34 Punts Key Decisions to Cabinet and a Commission That Does Not Yet Exist – Pixel Envy
Catharine Tunney, CBC News: Bill C-34, the Safe Social Media Act, would force social media services — defined as traditional social media platforms, live-streaming services and adult content services focused on user-shared content — to restrict accounts for children under 16 years old. However, services could seek an exemption if they implement what officials briefing reporters called adequate safeguards to protect children. The exemption would…
Canadian AI and Social Media Bill Sparks Expert Skepticism Over Loopholes and Enforcement Challenges
Canadian legislation introduced this week to regulate AI chatbots and ban social media access for children under 16 has drawn sharp criticism from academics and legal experts, who warn that vague provisions, potential loopholes, and a lengthy implementation timeline could undermine its effectiveness and even increase risks for young users. The bill, unveiled amid national […] The post Canadian AI and Social Media Bill Sparks Expert Skepticism Ov…
This week in federal political news: concerns about the AI strategy; a potential ban on social media for those under 16; protests against the Alto high-speed rail project; more leeway to authorize pesticides; and more Francophone regions in Alberta. And, speaking of Alberta, Pierre Poilievre calls for national unity.
The Exemption Illusion: Why the Government’s Plan to Fast Track Bill C-34’s Kids' Social Media Ban Means No Standards, No Privacy Review, and No Enforcement
One of the most heavily promoted features of Bill C-34, the government’s Safe Social Media Act, is that its social media ban for those under 16 comes with a potential exemption for platforms that satisfy the new Digital Safety Commission that they provide adequate safeguards for children. But based on comments from government officials, it appears the exemption is an illusion, at least for years to come. The legislation carefully sets out how th…
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