Canada: Our data, our laws
http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2013/12/12/our-data-our-laws/

Our data, our laws
Lisa M. Austin, Heather Black, Michael Geist, Avner Levin and Ian Kerr, National Post
12/12/13 | Last Updated: 11/12/13 3:15 PM ET
Over the past six months, the steady stream of disclosures from former U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) contractor Edward Snowden has revealed a massive surveillance infrastructure that seemingly touches all Internet and telephone communication across the globe.
While the issue has generated robust debates in many countries, the Canadian political response has been relatively quiet. In an effort to address the lack of oversight over Canadian surveillance activities, Liberal MP and former public safety minister Wayne Easter recently introduced Bill C-551, which would establish a National Security Committee of Parliamentarians.
The bill is a welcome move towards providing greater transparency and accountability for Canadian intelligence agencies, yet attention to oversight is not enough. We also need to address the legal framework under which these agencies operate, and the privacy protections granted to Canadians under the law.
This is true not only for Canada our laws 20th-century privacy protections are no match for 21st-century surveillance technologies but also for U.S. law. The need for U.S. reforms may represent an enormous challenge, but Canadians find themselves between a proverbial rock and a hard place, as our communications data is increasingly stored on the servers of U.S. companies subject to U.S. law.