Friday, May 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Privacy watchdog finds thousands of tax account breaches, urges stronger protections

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 May, 2026 09:03 AM
  • Privacy watchdog finds thousands of tax account breaches, urges stronger protections

The federal privacy watchdog says there have been more than 42,000 breaches at the Canada Revenue Agency since 2020 as a result of people gaining unauthorized access to, or modifying, taxpayer information.

In a special report tabled in Parliament, privacy commissioner Philippe Dufresne points to gaps in the revenue agency's prevention, monitoring, detection and handling of breaches.

Dufresne found the agency couldn't provide details of every confirmed breach due to limitations in its tracking systems and the overall volume of incidents.

The commissioner's office says the agency did not implement mandatory multi-factor authentication — a means of helping people bolster account security — in a timely manner and did not consistently rely on methods considered to be best practices.

It also says the agency could not always adequately explain how attackers managed to bypass authentication processes.

The commissioner made nine recommendations for improvement, eight of which were accepted in full and one in part by the revenue agency.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

Minister won't commit to national flood insurance program in near future

Minister won't commit to national flood insurance program in near future
Federal Emergency Management Minister Eleanor Olszewski says she can't promise the government will launch the promised National Flood Insurance Program "in the near future."

Minister won't commit to national flood insurance program in near future

Carney says the U.S. can't dictate the terms of trade talks ahead of CUSMA review

Carney says the U.S. can't dictate the terms of trade talks ahead of CUSMA review
Canada will not make any more concessions to the United States ahead of negotiations to review the continental trade pact, Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Wednesday, as he insisted Washington will not be allowed to dictate the terms of the talks.

Carney says the U.S. can't dictate the terms of trade talks ahead of CUSMA review

Crown abruptly closes case in B.C. trial of ex-Mountie accused of security offence

Crown abruptly closes case in B.C. trial of ex-Mountie accused of security offence
British Columbia's Supreme Court heard Tuesday that three Chinese police officials went "missing" for six hours during an RCMP-escorted visit to Vancouver in 2018, setting off concerns they could be trying to illicitly repatriate someone.

Crown abruptly closes case in B.C. trial of ex-Mountie accused of security offence

Liberals move to take control of House committees now that they've secured majority

Liberals move to take control of House committees now that they've secured majority
The Liberals are moving to take control of House of Commons committees now that they've secured a majority government.

Liberals move to take control of House committees now that they've secured majority

Alberta's 'Forever Canadian' petition leader says UCP stifling democratic process

Alberta's 'Forever Canadian' petition leader says UCP stifling democratic process
The former politician who gathered more than 456,000 signatures to keep Alberta in Canada says he watched firsthand the legislature committee tasked with its review stifle the democratic process.

Alberta's 'Forever Canadian' petition leader says UCP stifling democratic process

Senators call on Carney to restore antisemitism envoy, step up fight against hate

Senators call on Carney to restore antisemitism envoy, step up fight against hate
The Senate human rights committee is calling for more education, digital literacy outreach and a federal task force on hate to fight a spike in anti-Jewish hate crimes and intimidation.

Senators call on Carney to restore antisemitism envoy, step up fight against hate