Role Of Cyber Crime In Canada

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Cybercrimes and Cyber Protection in Canada
Whenever a new technological advancements are made, laws and agencies must be implemented and amendments must be crafted to protect its users. As personal computers became available to Canada’s population, information became more accessible than ever before, and personal information such as a person’s address was easier to obtain. The computer and new technological advancements led to a new branch of criminality; cybercrimes.
Cybercrimes are computer-related crimes defined by the Council of Europe (2001) as offences against the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of computer data and systems as well as computer-related and content-related offences. Furthermore, copyright infringement and …show more content…

Canada was one of the pioneering countries in computer crime legislation since the country adopted their laws before the Council of Europe Recommendation of 1989 (Schjølberg 24). Bill C-18 was the first government bill passed in Canada to punish cybercrimes (Schjølberg 27). The bill was introduced on December 19, 1984, and was passed by both the House of Commons and the Senate (Schjølberg 27). It received the Royal Assent on June 20, 1985, and was from then on known as the Criminal Law Amendment Act of 1985 (Schjølberg …show more content…

The convention, put into place in 2001, gives the 39 signatory countries guidelines to develop national legislation to combat cybercrimes and is also used as a framework for international co-operation between the countries who have signed (Government of Canada, “Cybercrime”). Furthermore, it demands that countries implementing the convention to give permission to law enforcement to order Internet service providers to monitor citizens’ online activities as well as outlaw discrimination based on religion or race, such as racism and xenophobia (Connolly). In 2015, the government of Canada ratified the convention, which strengthens Canada’s capacity to cooperate with international partners to fight cyber criminality by making it easier for the country to ask for help and assist other countries in their fight against cybercrimes (Connolly).
Additionally, computer crimes generate new challenges for legislators and law enforcement agencies, such as the CSIS or local police station, that they have to face in order to keep Canada’s population secure (Valiquet). Four main challenges faced nowadays; enforcing Canadian laws in cyber spaces and managing to get international co-operation in cybercrime investigations, modernizing offences in the criminal code to include new computer crimes and new forms of offences in addition

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