On May 8, the federal, British Columbia, and Alberta privacy commissioners published new guidelines to remind organizations that under Canadian private - sector privacy laws, organizations are required to obtain
meaningful consent for the collection, use, and disclosure of personal information.
Not exact matches
If the skeptics are right, Wood writes, Common Core «will damage the quality of K — 12 education
for many students; strip parents and local communities of
meaningful influence over school curricula; centralize a great deal of power in the hands of federal bureaucrats and private interests; push
for the aggregation and use of large amounts of personal data on students without the
consent of parents; usher in an era of even more abundant and more intrusive standardized testing; and absorb enormous sums of public funding that could be spent to better effect on other aspects of education.»
In you want to build a pipeline through a portion of a First Nation's traditional territory, but not in a manner that renders the entire territory unusable
for use,
consent will not be required, but
meaningful consultation will be required.
Most notably, regarding third - party applications, the Assistant Commissioner determined that Facebook did not have adequate safeguards in place to prevent unauthorized access by application developers to users» personal information, and furthermore was not doing enough to ensure that
meaningful consent was obtained from individuals
for the disclosure of their personal information to application developers.
At least one commenter explained that if we required
consent or authorization
for use and disclosure of protected health information
for treatment, payment, and health care operations then we must also have a right to request restrictions of such disclosure in order to make the
consent meaningful.
The reason is because there is insufficient information provided by Facebook to the users in order
for the users to run their
meaningful consent.