Stockwell Day calls for changes to cybercrime bill - Action News
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Stockwell Day calls for changes to cybercrime bill

Former public safety minister Stockwell Day says he hopes the Conservative government takes "another look" at its bill to fight cybercrime and curtails some of the powers it would give to police.

Former public safety minister urges caution in policing cyberbullying and other online crime

Former Conservative public safety minister Stockwell Day says he is opposed to allowing more police access to private data without a warrant. (CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick)

Former public safety minister Stockwell Day says he hopes the Conservative government takes "another look" at its bill to fight cybercrime and curtails some of the powers it would give to police.

Speaking as a panellist on CBC News Network's Power & Politics, Day said he's sympathetic to concerns raised about Bill C-13by Ontario Privacy Commissioner Ann Cavoukian, who said the government is "overreaching."

Cavoukian saidthe government shouldsplit the bill to deal with the cyberbullying provisions separately, echoing concerns of Carol Todd, whose daughter Amanda killed herself after being bullied online.

Day was a cabinet minister in the Conservative government from 2006 until he retired from Parliament in 2011.

"In my former portfolio at public security and public safety, this was an issue, the whole area of privacy and what can police do," he said, noting that reaction to a heartbreaking situation can be understandably profound.

"There can be an overreaction in terms of how you correct it. So [Cavoukian is] raising a bit of an alarm here. Let's be very careful in how we could protect someone in a situation like this, but let's also be careful in going too far and limiting even things like free speech, [or using] invasive techniques that could be employed by policing."

"I'm hoping they take another look at this and kind of curtail some of those powers," Day added.

'Crystal clear'

It's alarming, Day said, that people increasingly treat a lack ofprivacy "with a bit of a shrug."

Laws, he said, have to be "crystal clear on the aspect of police, what data they could have. I stood firmly against giving more access without some kind of warrant procedure."

Canada must also balance freedom of expressionwith the need to protect vulnerable young people, he said.

"I'm hoping that all MPs take a serious look at how we can maintain certain rights to speech and freedom of expression even when it's unpleasant."