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RCMP has not yet handed over information about mobile phone spyware programs to the Privacy Watchdog

More than a month after RCMP approved the use of invasive mobile phone spyware technology, national police still hand over information about the program to Congressional privacy watchdogs. do not have.

Privacy Commissioner Philippe Dufresne told the House of Commons Institutional Review Board in late June that he learned about RCMP's "Covert Access and Intercept Team" and its use of mobile phone spyware through media coverage.

Read more:Use of spyware RCMP analyzed by Parliamentary Commission

RCMP in June In 10 individual surveys from 2018 to 2020, we introduced invasive mobile phone hacking technology. This exposure was made in response to a request from a conservative MP parliamentary document and was first reported by Politico.

Units use what is called an "on-device survey tool" or ODIT. This allows Mounteds to gain "secret remote" access to the target mobile phone and other electronic devices. By secretly installing these tools, RCMP can collect data such as text messages, recordings, photos, calendars and financial records. In addition, you can collect sounds picked up by the device's microphone and images observed by the mobile phone's camera.

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Dufresne told the Commission that RCMP conducted a "privacy impact assessment" on the use of spyware in 2021. rice field. I deployed a hacking tool in my research.

"Given this new technology, are safeguards sufficient, or are there any recommendations for making them safe from a privacy perspective? These tools may be needed, Does it have more impact than guaranteed from a privacy perspective?… This is the central question, ”Dufresne said.

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Dufresne repeatedly refused to speak about the question until the RCMP briefed in his office.

The RCMP emphasized that 10 uses of intrusive spyware were approved by the judiciary. The unit also strongly suggests that tactics are needed due to the ubiquity of encrypted communications, claiming that it makes electronic investigations more difficult.

"Police may be able to collect data stored on (encrypted) devices or sent and received using (encrypted) devices, but with encryption data Often becomes incomprehensible, "RCMP said in a disclosure to Congress. The

unit continued to say that its "Covert Access and Intercept Team" would use spyware when "a low-intrusion technique failed." Spyware allows Mountaines to collect data after the target device receives and decrypts the data, or before it is encrypted and sent.

Read more:Canadian espionage agency campaigning "long-term" against cybercriminals

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Ron Dabert, director of the Citizens Lab at the University of Toronto and a world-leading expert in surveillance technology, said Canada was the country. Quietly deploy invasive spyware to the police.

"The Government of Canada aims to protect human rights and uphold the rule of law and democracy around the world. Private adoption of spyware (and other surveillance technologies) , The exact opposite of these principles, "Deibert wrote in a submission to the Institutional Review Board reviewed by Global News.

"In adopting this technology, we basically tell authoritarian states and their allies that they do not care about these principles."

Institutional Review Board The meeting will hear from Minister of Public Security Marco Mendicino and Senior Representative of RCMP late Monday.

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