Saturday, June 20, 2026
ADVT 
National

AI regulations needed to protect rights: watchdog

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Nov, 2020 08:49 PM
  • AI regulations needed to protect rights: watchdog

Artificial intelligence must be regulated to protect Canadians' privacy and human rights, a federal watchdog says.

In issuing new recommendations for regulating AI Thursday, Canada's privacy commissioner Daniel Therrien said he is calling for legislation to regulate the use and development of AI systems.

Such legislation will help to reap the benefits of AI while upholding individuals’ fundamental right to privacy, he said in a statement.

Therrien said these changes should entrench privacy as a human right and a necessary element for the exercise of other fundamental rights.

AI models analyze and try to predict aspects of human behaviour and interests that can be used to make automated decisions about people.

Those can include whether to issue job offers or qualify applicants for loans, setting insurance premiums, and even raising suspicions of unlawful behaviour, Therrien said.

"Artificial intelligence has immense promise, but it must be implemented in ways that respect privacy, equality and other human rights," Therrien said.

"Such decisions have a real impact on lives, and raise concerns about how they are reached, as well as issues of fairness, accuracy, bias, and discrimination."

Therrien said legal changes are needed to address these concerns. Those include amending the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act to allow, but restrict, the use of personal information in AI innovation.

He recommended creating a right to meaningful explanation for automated decisions and a right to contest those decisions.

Also, he called for strengthening accountability by requiring demonstrations of privacy compliance, and empowering his office to issue binding orders and proportional financial penalties for violations.

Last month, the federal, Alberta and B.C. privacy commissioners said that five million images of shoppers’ faces were collected without their consent at a dozen of Canada’s most popular malls.

Real estate company Cadillac Fairview used cameras and facial-recognition technology to discern shoppers' ages and genders, according to the watchdogs' investigation.

The commissioners had no legal power to issue fines against the firm, or any companies that violate Canadians’ personal information.

B.C. information and privacy commissioner Michael McEvoy said the inability to address these violations is an "incredible shortcoming of Canadian law that should really change."

MORE National ARTICLES

Be CAUTIOUS About Providing Access To Your Computer – FRAUD ALERT

Be CAUTIOUS About Providing Access To Your Computer – FRAUD ALERT
This past weekend, thieves once again struck an unsuspecting Abbotsford citizen, defrauding her of $15,900 through an elaborate phone scam.  

Be CAUTIOUS About Providing Access To Your Computer – FRAUD ALERT

RCMP Not At Fault For Man’s Death After Release From UBC Detachment: Police Watchdog

RCMP Not At Fault For Man’s Death After Release From UBC Detachment: Police Watchdog
RCMP reported that early on February 5, 2020, a man was arrested and transported to the University RCMP detachment.

RCMP Not At Fault For Man’s Death After Release From UBC Detachment: Police Watchdog

Indians Getting Permanent Residency In Canada In 2019 Increase By 105 Per Cent

The NFAP analysis of Immigration, Citizenship and Refugees data in Canada showed that the number of Indians who became permanent residents in Canada increased from 39,340 in 2016 to 80,685 in 2019, the American Bazaar reported on Wednesday citing the report as saying.  

Indians Getting Permanent Residency In Canada In 2019 Increase By 105 Per Cent

TransLink Granted Injunction Against Protesters

TransLink Granted Injunction Against Protesters
TransLink announced that it has been granted an injunction to prevent protesters from “physically obstructing, interfering, or otherwise impeding its SkyTrain facilities.”

TransLink Granted Injunction Against Protesters

BC NDP Claims Andrew Wilkinson Delayed Surrey Hospital By Selling Land

John Horgan’s BC NDP government acquired land in Cloverdale for a new Surrey Hospital after BC Liberal Leader Andrew Wilkinson sold property originally set aside for a much-needed hospital.

BC NDP Claims Andrew Wilkinson Delayed Surrey Hospital By Selling Land

Human Brain Mailed From Toronto In Canada Post Shipment To Wisconsin Seized At U.S. Border

U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers seize human brain in international mail at Blue Water Bridge in Port Huron last week.

Human Brain Mailed From Toronto In Canada Post Shipment To Wisconsin Seized At U.S. Border