BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  C-22 could create surveillance infrastructure
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Thu, 28 May 2026 08:25:28 -0500
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Google joins privacy backlash and warns Canada Bill C-22 could 'break 
end-to-end encryption' and create a 'surveillance infrastructure'

Date:
Wed, 27 May 2026 14:07:17 +0000

After the privacy tech industry, Google and Apple are warning that Canada's 
proposed Bill C-22 could force developers to build backdoors into their 
devices, and push for strict judicial oversight:  Google and Apple have
intensified their opposition to Canada's controversial Bill C-22, warning 
that the proposed legislation could force them to compromise end-to-end 
encryption and create massive cybersecurity vulnerabilities. 

What's also known as the Lawful Access Act  proposed by Canada's ruling 
Liberal Party and is currently being debated in the House of Commons  aims to 
give law enforcement greater access to data to investigate security threats. 
However, tech companies fear that the legislation grants the government 
unchecked authority to issue secret orders without judicial oversight. For 
everyday citizens, the stakes couldn't be higher. If the bill passes in its 
current form, the devices and secure messaging apps users rely on daily could 
be secretly compromised. To protect your digital footprint from government 
overreach, utilizing the best VPNs or encrypted messaging apps is becoming an 
increasingly essential step. But even the strongest privacy tools struggle if 
underlying device encryption is legally mandated to feature a backdoor.

In testimony before the House of Commons' Standing Committee on Public Safety 
and National Security, representatives from both Google and Apple pushed 
lawmakers to add explicit protections for encryption. 

"Secret orders are out of step with other democratic countries and would 
severely restrict companies' ability to be transparent with users about how 
their data is protected," said Jeanette Patell, director for government 
affairs and public policy in Canada for Google  as reported by Reuters . The 
ongoing backlash against Bill C-22 The proposed legislation would require 
"electronic service providers" to adjust their systems to give surveillance 
and monitoring capabilities to police services and the Canadian Security 
Intelligence Service (CSIS). It could also force companies to retain user 
metadata for up to a year. 

In a brief submitted to the committee, Google warned that the bill 
establishes a "surveillance infrastructure" and gives the Minister of Public 
Safety sweeping powers. The search giant cautioned that without a stronger 
definition of what constitutes a "systemic vulnerability," the law could be 
used to mandate backdoors. 

"Without a stronger definition of 'systemic vulnerability,' the law could be 
used to decrease overall user security, by creating backdoors that would 
break end-to-end encryption and create significant cybersecurity risks, 
facilitating foreign interference and weakening global user privacy," Google 
stated in its submission. 

The company was absolute in its stance on user privacy: "Google has never 
built a backdoor or other mechanism to circumvent end-to-end encryption in 
our products. If we say a product is end-to-end encrypted, it is end-to-end 
encrypted."  Google is not fighting this battle
alone. The bill has faced steep pushback from encrypted messaging app Signal,
as well as Meta and major VPN providers like Windscribe , ExpressVPN , and
Proton VPN .

Apple has also drawn a hard line. When asked by a Conservative member of 
parliament whether Apple would pull out of Canada if forced to build a 
backdoor, Erik Neuenschwander, Apple's senior director for user privacy and 
child safety, kept the pressure on lawmakers. 

"I can't speculate what would happen in that situation," Neuenschwander said, 
according to Reuters . "Through this engagement and the continued dialogue, 
we hope to have positive amendments made to the bill." 

Apple's threat is far from empty. The iPhone maker recently demonstrated its 
willingness to walk away from markets rather than compromise user security, 
famously killing its iCloud end-to-end encryption feature in the UK after 
receiving a secret order. 

Whether Canada will force a similar tech exodus remains to be seen.

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/vpn/vpn-privacy-security/google-joins-privacy-backla
sh-and-warns-canada-bill-c-22-could-break-end-to-end-encryption-and-create-a-s
urveillance-infrastructure

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