OTTAWA — More than 15 civil society groups are urging the justice minister to hive off proposed changes to the Criminal Code and Human Rights Act from a b
ill aimed at tackling online harms.
They warn that keeping those provisions in the Online Harms Act could “overshadow” its main goal of holding social media giants accountable for protecting users from harmful online content. That has been met with heavy scrutiny, along with the government’s plan to reintroduce a section of the Canadian Human Rights Act to allow people to file complaints about hate speech online.
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Separate controversial Criminal Code changes from Online Harms Act, advocates urgeOTTAWA — More than 15 civil society groups are urging the justice minister to hive off proposed changes to the Criminal Code and Human Rights Act from a bill aimed at tackling online harms.
Read more »
Separate controversial Criminal Code changes from Online Harms Act, advocates urgeOTTAWA — More than 15 civil society groups are urging the justice minister to hive off proposed changes to the Criminal Code and Human Rights Act from a bill aimed at tackling online harms.
Read more »
Separate controversial Criminal Code changes from Online Harms Act, advocates urgeMore than 15 civil society groups are urging the justice minister to hive off proposed changes to the Criminal Code and Human Rights Act from a bill aimed at tackling online harms.
Read more »
Separate controversial Criminal Code changes from Online Harms Act, advocates urgeOTTAWA — More than 15 civil society groups are urging the justice minister to hive off proposed changes to the Criminal Code and Human Rights Act from a bill aimed at tackling online harms.
Read more »
Separate controversial Criminal Code changes from Online Harms Act, advocates urgeOTTAWA — More than 15 civil society groups are urging the justice minister to hive off proposed changes to the Criminal Code and Human Rights Act from a bill aimed at tackling online harms.
Read more »
Separate controversial Criminal Code changes from Online Harms Act, advocates urgeOTTAWA — More than 15 civil society groups are urging the justice minister to hive off proposed changes to the Criminal Code and Human Rights Act from a bill aimed at tackling online harms.
Read more »