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Ottawa unveils Online Harms Act, proposing new penalties for hate crimes

Justice Minister Arif Virani has tabled a long-awaited bill that would compel technology platforms to remove harmful content and increase the maximum penalty for advocating genocide online to life in prison.

News

Ottawa unveils Online Harms Act, proposing new penalties for hate crimes

Highly anticipated Bill C-63 would add a definition of hatred to Criminal Code

By Martin Patriquin
Justice Minister Arif Virani has unveiled Bill C-63, which would compel technology platforms to remove harmful online content. Photo: The Canadian Press/Adrian Wyld
Feb 26, 2024
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Justice Minister Arif Virani has tabled a long-awaited bill that would compel technology platforms to remove harmful content and increase the maximum penalty for advocating genocide online to life in prison.

First promised in 2019, the legislation unveiled Monday would target social media and live-streaming services, as well as user-uploaded adult content services, in an attempt to “reduce exposure to harmful content and empower and support users,” according to briefing materials provided to journalists. The Online Harms Act, or Bill C-63, would also add a definition of “hatred” to the Criminal Code, consistent with Supreme Court decisions.

The proposed law, which the government says is necessary to curb a dramatic increase in online harassment, child exploitation and hate speech, is arguably the most contentious part of its legislative efforts to regulate “Canada’s digital public square.”

“I want to be crystal clear about what the Online Harms Act does not do. It does not undermine freedom of speech,” Virani told reporters. “It enhances free expression by empowering all people to seek and participate in online debate.”

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Here are the key points from Bill C-63:

  • The legislation proposes to create a five-member digital safety commission to enforce the new law, with the power to order the removal of non-consensual intimate content, as well as a digital safety ombudsperson to field complaints and make recommendations to social media services.
  • Only services with a certain threshold of users would be covered by the legislation, though the governor-in-council can include additional social media services below it should they pose a significant risk of harm. (The documents did not specify the exact thresholds) 
  • The legislation focuses on seven types of harmful online content: content that victimizes a child or revictimizes a survivor; content used to bully a child; content that induces a child to harm themselves; content that incites violent extremism or terrorism; content that incites violence; content that foments hatred; and intimate content communicated without consent, including deepfakes.
  • The bill would compel services to remove sexually victimizing or revictimizing content, as well as non-consensual intimate content, within 24 hours following a flag or a complaint regarding the content. 
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  • Online services targeted by the legislation would have the duty to act responsibly, make certain content inaccessible and protect children. The law would exclude private and encrypted message services like Signal and Telegram.
  • The bill would allow the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal to mediate disputes, order the removal of hate speech and levy fines of up to $20,000. As for the platforms, the government said fines for non-compliance would be as high as six per cent of global revenue. 

In remarks to reporters, Virani stressed the lengths the government had gone to in gathering views and concerns on the issue, saying, “this legislation does not come out of a vacuum.” Rather, he said, “it is a result of literally years of hard work, research and consultation with stakeholders, with experts, with international partners and average Canadians who are concerned about the well-being of their families, their neighbours and their communities.

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“The message that all those people have sent to us is loud and it is unequivocal. Doing nothing is not an option.”

The minister noted that Canada is joining allies like the United Kingdom, France, Germany and Australia in legislating in the area. “We have learned from their experiences,” Virani said. “We cannot tolerate anarchy on the internet. The cost is too great.”

#Bill C-63 #economy #online harms #Tech

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Photo: The Canadian Press/Adrian Wyld

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