I found this statement from the article confusing
“Signal isn’t headquartered in Canada so they can just shut off Canadian servers, but our HQ is”
Bill sounds awful
The bill would also require electronic service providers to develop and maintain the technical capabilities necessary to enable police and the Canadian Security Intelligence Service to effectively obtain communications and information for investigations. The bill would prohibit a provider from disclosing the existence or content of a ministerial order.
Ugh.
I prob believe that Canada would not go full DPRK with this. But that’s not the point! Point is, there’s no such thing as a backdoor for only good guys. Backdoors impact everyone. We already saw this here in the US in 1994 iwth CALEA. That was infiltrated by hostile foreign govs to gain broad surveilence inside US telecom networks.
And they didn’t have to hack anything, because the US government insists that all networking gear ship pre-hacked so that cops can get into it.
On top of that! Once you agree to build backdoors for a gov like Canada that mostly respects human rights… now the most repressive and brutal regimes in the world will demand the same access. It is dangerous to normalize ways to bypass encryption.
The statement you found confusing… was a quote from WindScribe VPN.
They’re saying that since they’re a Canadian company, they can’t just avoid cooperation by denying service to Canadians — this affects their global operations.
Ooh, thanks! Makes sense now.
Canada post and other mail providers will now be opening all envelopes and packages sent. All contents will be scanned or photographed and held on file for 2 years time, and released to relevant authorities upon request of investigation. To make things easier please do not seal packages or envelopes for easier and more convenient access.
All photos and scanned documents will be held in a highly secured database with easy backdoors access!
Pretty much the equivalent in terms of what Canada wants to implement with access to VPN logs and asking ISPs to keep logs for 1-2 years minimum.
Could… But will they actually?
Oh no :(



