Saturday, March 2, 2024

Bill C-63 gives Commissions too much power

The Trudeau government's new Online Harms legislation Bill C-63, while less of an overreach than its predecessor Bill C-36, concentrates too much unchecked power in the Canadian Human Rights Commission and  a new Digital Safety Commission. 


Februay 27, 2024 - "Canada has launched  legislation reining in social media and reducing its citizens’ freedom to express themselves online. And while supporters of the Online Harms Act (Bill C-63) believe tighter control of speech and images by government is necessary to make platforms such as X and Facebook 'safer,' it’s unclear if that will be the case.... 

"There will be a Digital Safety Commission led by a chair, vice-chair, and commissioners supported by a staff of public servants. Its job will be to oversee social media companies, each of which will have to satisfy the commission that it has policies and practices in place that protect users from seven distinct online harms. Those are: sexually victimizing children, bullying, inducing children to harm themselves, extremism/terrorism, inciting violence, fomenting hatred, and sharing intimate content without consent, including deepfakes. The platforms will have three 'duties of care' ... to act responsibly, ensure content in those seven categories is inaccessible, and to otherwise protect children. In addition, platforms will have to inform police if, while patrolling users’ content, they come across incidents of child sexual exploitation.

"The good news is that just about everything this new five-person commission of cabinet appointees will be 'imposing' is already covered in the Criminal Code and has been blocked or removed by the companies for years. And given that early drafts of the legislation envisioned a government commission empowered to directly patrol and order the removal of 'lawful but awful' online content, the duty of care approach is a welcome relief that signals a significant retreat....

"In addition, the government is creating a Digital Safety Ombudsman (also a cabinet appointee) whose job will involve duties such as supporting victims of the online harms outlined, offering advice to the companies, and educating the public in navigating the social media landscape. Seems a little heavy on the bureaucratic overkill if you ask me, but ... again, in terms of having a lot for the average person to worry about... not a lot to see here. Not much about your experience is likely to change, at least not at this stage, given that the behaviours demanded are already being performed.

"But that doesn’t mean there’s nothing to worry about. As internet expert and University of Ottawa law professor Michael Geist pointed out, the powers of the Digital Safety Commission are immense. 'It can issue rulings on making content inaccessible, conduct investigations, demand any information it wants from regulated services (and) hold hearings that under certain circumstances can be closed to the public,' Geist wrote. 'The Commission is not subject to any legal or technical rules of evidence, as the law speaks to acting informally and expeditiously, an approach that seems inconsistent with its many powers.'

"Another legal expert, Halifax lawyer David Fraser, put it this way on X: 
"I 100% expected it to be much worse" doesn’t make it automatically good. Take a close note of the repeated use of the phrase 'reasonable grounds to believe' and 'suspect", which set a very low bar and always err on the side of removal,' he wrote.'The content must be removed or made inaccessible permanently if there are reasonable grounds to believe that there are reasonable grounds to suspect.... Not even actually believe or actually suspect.

"Alarming, in my view, is the Online Harms’ provision to define racist and homophobic comments as discrimination and give the Canadian Human Rights Commission (CHRC) the power to take complaints on that basis, levy fines up to $20,000 against those it deems guilty, and order them to remove their posts. This stands a very good chance of flooding the human rights commission ... with complaints from organizations and individuals seeking to embarrass and impoverish their ideological foes.... It is entirely conceivable that everything from religious texts to statements such as 'a person with a penis cannot be a woman' will be subject to fines and takedown orders by the CHRC, where the usual rules of evidence don’t apply, guilt is the de facto default position, and the term 'kangaroo court' is often applied.

"Lastly, it was disappointing not to see one more duty imposed on X and Facebook, specifically the duty to preserve freedom of expression and apply their content moderation rules in an objective fashion, favouring neither progressives nor conservatives. But, given the road we’re now going down, that’s probably not the government’s preferred outcome."


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