Thursday, April 9, 2026
ADVT 
International

Privacy Experts Say Canadians Need Better Training On Internet Security

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Aug, 2015 12:35 PM
    MONTREAL — The ongoing fallout of the Ashley Madison data breach has highlighted the pitfalls of using work email addresses for personal use.
     
    The Toronto-based dating website, which promotes and facilitates extramarital affairs, was the victim of a recent cyberattack, with the personal information of millions of its users released publicly.
     
    Hundreds of email addresses in the data release appear to be connected to federal, provincial and municipal workers across Canada, as well as to the RCMP and the military.
     
    Karen Eltis, an online privacy expert and law professor at the University of Ottawa, says the cyberattack shows that employees across the country — and many who work in government — are in dire need of Internet privacy training.
     
    "It may seem obvious but to many it's not obvious," she said in an interview. "The web is not the Wild, Wild West and anonymity online is illusory."
     
    More than 630 email addresses used to sign up on ashleymadison.com end in gc.ca, which is the standard ending for emails used by employees of most federal government departments.
     
    Moreover, research into the leaked files shows that 35 credit-card transactions on the site — by 10 different people — were conducted using House of Commons or Senate IP Internet addresses.
     
    More than 75 credit-card transactions were conducted by 48 people on IP addresses linked to the Department of National Defence, the leaked files reveal.
     
    Eltis said the hack demonstrates that employers across the country need to better train workers on how to ensure companies aren't embarrassed — or worse, blackmailed — when this kind of data breach occurs.
     
    "Online privacy awareness training is crucial to protect not only the employees but the employers' reputation," she said.
     
    "It may not say something about the company but it's about the perception that is attributed to the company."
     
    At least one government agency has already instituted mandatory Internet privacy training as a result of data breaches.
     
    In 2014, Canada's cryptologic agency, Communications Security Establishment, learned that the data of several of its workers had been compromised. It forced all employees to take a training course on how to protect digital information.
     
    Prof. Teresa Scassa, another University of Ottawa law professor, said more and more employers are paying attention to training employees about basic understanding of Internet privacy issues.
     
    "But the flip side is that employers have the obligation to protect the personal information that they have," she said.
     
    "Probably none of these individuals expected this to come out as public, they made the mistake that so many of us do — to trust their personal information to a company."
     
    Scassa also warned that the emails used to sign up to Ashley Madison weren't verified, meaning many of the government email addresses in the company's system might have been used by people who did not own them.
     
    "There does seem to be some levels of naivete from people not thinking through all the consequences (of using work emails) and learning these things the hard way."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Germanwings Co-pilot Andreas Lubitz Searched Internet For Suicide Methods

    Andreas Lubitz, the German co-pilot suspected of deliberately crashing a passenger plane into the French Alps, killing himself along with the other 149 people on board, researched methods of committing suicide on the internet the night before the tragic flight, the prosecutor's office of Dusseldorf city announced on Thursday.

    Germanwings Co-pilot Andreas Lubitz Searched Internet For Suicide Methods

    Jean Paul Gaultier Reflects On Madonna And Shock 'Au Revoir' To Ready-To-Wear

    Jean Paul Gaultier Reflects On Madonna And Shock 'Au Revoir' To Ready-To-Wear
    The French couturier — who found fame putting Madonna in a conical bra and helped shape global trends for four decades — shocked the fashion world by ending his ready-to-wear and menswear lines earlier this year.

    Jean Paul Gaultier Reflects On Madonna And Shock 'Au Revoir' To Ready-To-Wear

    Dubai-Based DP World Buying Container Terminal In Prince Rupert For $580 Million

    Dubai-Based DP World Buying Container Terminal In Prince Rupert For $580 Million
    VANCOUVER — DP World Ltd. has signed a deal to buy Maher Terminal's Fairview Container Terminal in Prince Rupert, B.C., from Deutsche Bank for $580 million.

    Dubai-Based DP World Buying Container Terminal In Prince Rupert For $580 Million

    Florida Mulls Charges For Son Of Canadian Diplomat Over Shooting That Killed Brother

    Florida Mulls Charges For Son Of Canadian Diplomat Over Shooting That Killed Brother
    TORONTO — The teenage son of a Canadian diplomat remained in youth custody Thursday suspected of being an accessory to murder but had not been formally charged, Florida state authorities said.

    Florida Mulls Charges For Son Of Canadian Diplomat Over Shooting That Killed Brother

    Doctors Blame Man's Kidney Failure On His Drinking A Gallon Of Iced Tea Every Day

    Doctors Blame Man's Kidney Failure On His Drinking A Gallon Of Iced Tea Every Day
    NEW YORK — Doctors traced an Arkansas man's kidney failure to an unusual cause — his habit of drinking a gallon of iced tea each day.

    Doctors Blame Man's Kidney Failure On His Drinking A Gallon Of Iced Tea Every Day

    Foreign Adoptions By Americans Fall By 9 Per Cent, Reach Lowest Level Since 1982

    Foreign Adoptions By Americans Fall By 9 Per Cent, Reach Lowest Level Since 1982
    NEW YORK — The number of foreign children adopted by U.S. parents dropped by 9 per cent last year to the lowest level since 1982, according to new State Department figures.

    Foreign Adoptions By Americans Fall By 9 Per Cent, Reach Lowest Level Since 1982