VoIP must be eliminated!

What a headline! ‘VoIP must be eliminated!‘ was the title of the keynote address delivered by Mark Evans at the Gentek Vendor Fair earlier today.

Mark was speaking about the industry’s pre-occupation with buzz-words which serve as hurdles for widespread adoption of technology. Mark asks: Why not call it ‘telephone service with lots of really cool features‘.

He added ‘Enterprise’ and ‘Solutions’ to list of confusing terms. Any others?

Online Rights is wrong

CIPPICCIPPIC – The Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Centre – is one of the groups behind an initiative called Online Rights Canada. Online Rights Canada is sponsoring a drive to create an ISP Privacy Pledge.

A letter was sent to Canadian ISPs in mid-September asking them to sign on, presumably at risk of being publicly humiliated:

This Pledge, along with a list of ISPs indicating which have adopted the Pledge and which have not, will be posted on the website OnlineRights.ca

There are aspects of the pledge that seem to go too far in hindering law enforcement. The preamble to the pledge in the letter to ISPs says

ISP subscribers also expect that their ISP will protect them from warrantless searches and wiretaps by the police, and will not act as an agent of the state in the law enforcement process.

Here is the pledge that ISPs are being asked to sign up to:

As an Internet Service Provider, we pledge to:

  1. Not respond to government/law enforcement requests for personal information about users unless the request is supported by a warrant or court order, or unless the request is being made explicitly under ss.184.4 or 487.11 of the Criminal Code.
  2. Not collect personally identifying information about users or monitor user content for law enforcement, national security, or other state purposes except where required by law to do so. If we see evidence of illegal activity, we may notify law enforcement authorities for further action.
  3. Notify the subscriber as soon as possible after we receive a legal request or court order for that subscriber’s personal information, unless the order does not permit such notification.

If we see evidence of illegal activity, we “may” notify law enforcement. Why is this sentence there? Let me understand pledge 2. An ISP sees evidence of illegal activity; will they or won’t they notify law enforcement? Under what circumstances will ISPs choose not to provide notification to law enforcement? When will they choose to do the right thing? How does this kind of uncertainty help subscribers believe that their ISPs aren’t acting as ‘agents of the state’?

It is also interesting to read the part in pledge 2 about not collecting information about users or monitoring user content for law enforcement, national security, or other state purposes except where required by law to do so. I guess it is OK to collect information about users for commercial purposes, such as contextual advertising, but don’t let “the state” in on it.

By adopting this pledge, you will be sending a signal to your subscribers and other internet users that you respect and value their privacy. You will also be sending a signal to the government that you are in the business of internet service, not law enforcement.

In other words, keep your head down. Stick to making money and mind your own business. When the police come looking for statements from witnesses, just look the other way. Hardly the attitude that leading corporate citizens would want to adopt.

Why would Online Rights believe ISPs shouldn’t be partners in making this a better country? In a democracy, I thought ‘the state’ includes all of us that live here, that participate in the economy here. Reading the manifesto from Online Rights, law enforcement and ‘the state’ is the enemy of the people.

I understand where CIPPIC is coming from in seeking to protect Canadian users from potential abuses of their privacy rights. Their proposed pledge, concerned with making law enforcement more difficult, misses the mark. Frankly, I am more concerned about corporate abuses. I’m concerned about people thinking that the internet provides a ‘digital exemption’ to laws and justice. I am especially concerned that the industry could even think of acting to undermine law enforcement, rather than find ways to support it.

There is no grey area identified in Online Rights’ planned publication of adopters of the Online Rights pledge. ISPs are expected to either adopt the pledge as written or not. As such, let’s hope Canada’s ISPs decide to mark it Online Wrong.

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Taming the web’s wild west

Bernie Farber, CEO of Canadian Jewish Congress and a recognized expert in hate crimes, had an op-ed piece in yesterday’s Ottawa Citizen entitled “Taming the web’s Wild West”.

In the article, he speaks of “the fine balance between the right to free speech and the right of individuals not to be the objects of hate and violent speech.”

Whazzup with Bell?

What is moving Bell’s stock this week?

It is up more than a buck in the last 3 trading sessions – not that big a move relative to TELUS or Rogers, but that is a lot for BCE. Up until this week, the biggest driver of BCE may have been TELUS’ Income Trust announcement from 3 weeks ago. TELUS had kept its income trust announcement under extremely tight wraps until the announcement was released.

Let’s hope that we’re not seeing trickles of inside information moving BCE.

Telecom and greenhouse gas

From the title, you may have been expecting this post to discuss mobile cellular phones. No, I am not reporting on a new study linking cel phone use to higher idling and increased release of green-house gas.

I saw a news clip about the Canadian Environment Minister summoning Canada’s car manufacturers to a meeting, where sources say she’ll lay out plans for regulating car emissions.

And you ask, how does this relate to telecom? This is from a conservative government – one that might be expected to keep hands off industry – let market forces rule. If consumers want cleaner cars, then the market will produce them and people will reward the manufacturers that produce them. Right?

According to an unidentified Conservative insider quoted in the story:

Canada has to have regulations that are valuable, enforceable and implementable – to do what they’re supposed to do.

As we watch for the implementation of the recommendations of the Telecom Policy Review Panel, it is perhaps worthwhile watching how this government deals with another of Canada’s key economic industries.

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