Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Rogers Sees Drop In Customer Info Requests From Police, Security Agencies

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Apr, 2015 11:09 AM
  • Rogers Sees Drop In Customer Info Requests From Police, Security Agencies
OTTAWA — Rogers Communications says it saw a sharp drop in the number of requests for customer information from government and police agencies last year — a result of swelling public concern and a landmark court ruling on telecommunications privacy.
 
In a report released today, Rogers says it received fewer than 114,000 such requests for subscriber information in 2014, down from almost 175,000 the previous year.
 
Last summer, the company said it would no longer routinely give basic customer information to police and security agencies without a warrant.
 
The move followed a key Supreme Court of Canada ruling as well as concerns voiced by subscribers, the telecom provider said at the time.
 
Last June, the Supreme Court ruled police need judicial authorization to get personal information about customers from Internet providers.
 
The high court rejected arguments that claimed the federal privacy law governing companies allowed providers to hand over subscriber identities voluntarily.

MORE National ARTICLES

Woman's Allegations Of Robbery, Confinement, Threats Were False: B.C. RCMP

Woman's Allegations Of Robbery, Confinement, Threats Were False: B.C. RCMP
NANAIMO, B.C. — Six people spent much of a day locked up in a Vancouver Island RCMP detachment over what police now say were false robbery and confinement allegations.

Woman's Allegations Of Robbery, Confinement, Threats Were False: B.C. RCMP

Bennett Says B.C. Utilities Commission To Resume Setting BC Hydro Rates

Bennett Says B.C. Utilities Commission To Resume Setting BC Hydro Rates
VICTORIA — The B.C. government has vowed to make the provincial utilities commission more independent almost three years after it stepped in and refused to allow the body to raise hydro rates for customers.

Bennett Says B.C. Utilities Commission To Resume Setting BC Hydro Rates

Lawyer Says Authorities Trying To Embarrass Hunter Accused Of Killing Sheep In Yukon

Lawyer Says Authorities Trying To Embarrass Hunter Accused Of Killing Sheep In Yukon
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Conservation authorities are trying to discredit and embarrass his client, says a lawyer representing an alleged cross-border poacher accused of lying about where he shot a record-setting Dall sheep.

Lawyer Says Authorities Trying To Embarrass Hunter Accused Of Killing Sheep In Yukon

A List Of The Victims Along Infamous B.C.'s Highway Of Tears

A List Of The Victims Along Infamous B.C.'s Highway Of Tears
VANCOUVER — A list of the 18 women and girls whose deaths and disappearances are part of the RCMP's investigation of the Highway of Tears in British Columbia. They were either found or last seen near Highways 16, 97 or 5:

A List Of The Victims Along Infamous B.C.'s Highway Of Tears

Former UBC Professor, Gets Probation For Secretly Recording People In Change Room

Former UBC Professor, Gets Probation For Secretly Recording People In Change Room
RICHMOND, B.C. — A former University of B.C. professor has been handed probation for secretly recording study participants in a change room.

Former UBC Professor, Gets Probation For Secretly Recording People In Change Room

Liberals to vote for anti-terrorism bill, vow to fix flaws if elected

Liberals to vote for anti-terrorism bill, vow to fix flaws if elected
OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau says Liberal MPs will vote in favour of a new anti-terrorism bill, despite concerns that it provides no parliamentary oversight over security agencies and includes no mandatory review of the legislation in the years to come.

Liberals to vote for anti-terrorism bill, vow to fix flaws if elected