in USA University national level debate we struggled with the intangibles. I see having returned to the country of my birth that CSIS (and the RCMP) have a virtual lock on vagueness. Didn't Parliament pass the Security Act in four days when those planes hit those buildings in AnOTHER country?!
weve ben under surveillance since we had a phone number and access to internet.... nothing has ever been private. Even your friends are probably not your friends but informants. All my friends were informants, my family, even my ex gfs, every single one of em. I literally live in the TRUMAN show.... Call them out and laugh at the masonic clowns, its all we can do. They are all actors. All those jobs, are acts, they are fake fucking people, all of them!!!
Does the recipient of a CSIS production order receive immunity/anonymity or are they protected by an indemnify/hold harmless agreement (or otherwise) by the Canadian government for their valuable aid to the national security (and what about an anonymous Order of Canada - that might be interesting - even with the associated NDA). Or do they hang in the breeze?
That's a great question. It doesn't go so far as to indemnify or hold the company harmless, but privacy laws provide for disclosures under such circumstances and s. 24(b) authorizes assistance with giving effect to the warrant, "notwithstanding any other law": Warrant to have effect notwithstanding other laws 24 Notwithstanding any other law, a warrant issued under section 21 or 23 ... (b) authorizes any other person to assist a person who that other person believes on reasonable grounds is acting in accordance with such a warrant.
@@privacylawyer so basically it forces the respondent to potentially incriminate him or herself with no compensation... I'm reminded each day why I don't return to Canada; it's a long list of reasons.
I know the location of 3 secret police stations due to my experience in telecommunications and cyber security. People have showed up to my house at night and glared at me.
I wonder how many PSC warrants a large cyber-related company might be served on a daily basis? Perhaps if the firm's large enough, like Google, they will have made some sort of arrangement already, but then how many times would they be accessing data on a daily basis?
According to this, they applied for and got 28 warrants in 2022. That doesn't seem like a lot of warrants, but as the video says each of those warrants can include multiple targets so it's hard to infer how broad each of them are. nsira-ossnr.gc.ca/en/publications/secretariat-operations/national-security-and-intelligence-review-agency-annual-report-2022/