Bill C-22 Doesn't Read Your Texts.
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Bill C-22 Doesn't Read Your Texts. It Doesn't Have To.
Bill C-22 Doesn't Read Your Texts. It Doesn't Have To.
Bill C-22 (Lawful Access Act, 2026) does not require police to read the content of your communications. It requires "core providers" to retain metadata — who you contacted, when, where, on which device — for one year, on every Canadian. Two former directors of the U.S. National Security Agency have been on record since 2014 that metadata is operationally equivalent-to or more useful than content for surveillance. A Stanford study found that five days of phone metadata is sufficient to identify medical conditions, religious affiliation, and sexual relationships. This article walks through what one year of that data reveals about an ordinary person — not as accusation, but as illustration of what becomes knowable about every Canadian under the bill as drafted.
(parliamentaudit.ca)
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