PIPEDA amendments broaden powers of Privacy Commissioner

Office of the Privacy Commissioner – The Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA) is the federal privacy law for the private sector. It applies to the collection, use and disclosure of personal information by an organization in the course of commercial activity.

In December 2010, Parliament passed amendments to the legislation, which was originally passed in 2000. The amendments, which were included in legislation to curb unwanted commercial solicitation by e-mail or other electronic formats (also known as spam), also broaden certain powers of the Privacy Commissioner.

In particular, the amendments give the Commissioner more discretion over which complaints she undertakes or completes. The change will permit the Office to maximize the use of its resources when investigating complaints that allege contraventions of PIPEDA. For instance, the Commissioner can decline to investigate a complaint that could more appropriately be dealt with through other avenues.

Under the amendments, the Commissioner is also empowered to share information related to an investigation with counterparts in the provinces or abroad. The objective is to facilitate investigations that have inter-provincial or international implications.

Most of the amendments were proclaimed into force on April 1, 2011. However, the amended sections 7.1, 12(2), 12.2(2) and 20(6) will only come into force as part of the overall anti-spam law.

Harvard study says computers don’t save hospitals money

Hospital computer systems are often built for administrators, not doctors

Computerworld – A Harvard Medical School study that looked at some of the nation’s “most wired” hospital facilities found that computerization of those facilities hasn’t saved them any money or improved administrative efficiency.

The recently released study evaluated data on 4,000 hospitals in the U.S over a four-year period and found that the immense cost of installing and running hospital IT systems is greater than any expected cost savings. And much of the software being written for use in clinics is aimed at administrators, not doctors, nurses and lab workers.  Continue reading

Facebook agrees to address Canada Privacy Commissioner’s concerns

Privacy Commissioner of Canada satisfied that proposed changes to the social networking site’s privacy practices and policies would bring Facebook into compliance with Canadian law.

Assistant privacy commissioner Elizabeth Denham and privacy commissioner Jennifer Stoddart reach agreement with Facebook on privacy (Photo Emily Chung/CBC)

Facebook has agreed to add significant new privacy safeguards and make other changes in response to the Privacy Commissioner of Canada’s recent investigation into the popular social networking site’s privacy policies and practices.  Continue reading