Canadian Do Not Call List
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The government of Canada announced on December 13, 2004 that they would introduce legislation to create a Canadian Do Not Call List. The Canadian list was expected to follow the model set by the National Do Not Call Registry established in the United States in June 2003.
Bill C-37, An Act to amend the Telecommunications Act, S.C. 2005, c.50 was the legislation which followed this announcement. It received royal assent on November 25, 2005 and will come into force when proclaimed. It gives the CRTC authority to establish a national do not call list, to establish procedures to administer the Act and to levy penalties for violations.
Professor Michael Geist, an authority on technology, Internet and copyright law and holder of the prestigious Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-Commerce Law at the University of Ottawa has criticized the changes adopted in the amended Act. He observes that the legislation exempts charities, political parties, polling companies and companies with existing business relationships. Professor Geist expresses particular concern about the extent and duration of the existing business relationship exception.
The form the list will take and the privacy benefits it will achieve remain uncertain. A working group of the CRTC has held hearings concerning the implementation of the list. It submitted recommendations[1] on July 26, 2006. As of December 4, 2006, the CRTC has yet to act on the recommendations.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Do not call list Operations Work Group (DOWG) Reports Consensus and Non Consensus reports dated July 26, 2006
[edit] Sources
- Canada's Do Not Hesitate to Call List, Geist, September 11, 2005
- Canada's Do-Not-Hesitate-To-Call List Goes From Bad to Worse Geist, October 20, 2005
- Industry Canada announcement of December 13, 2004
- Bill C-37
- CRTC Web Site
- Notice of May 2, 2006 CRTC Hearing See references cited in the announcement for submissions and applications by interested parties.
- Do Not Call:Hanging Up on the Telemarketers, CBC In Depth Report, November 25, 2005