A recent decision of the Federal Court of Canada ends (subject to any appeal) the federal Privacy Commissioner’s attempt to obtain an order against Facebook in relation to personal information practices linked to the Cambridge Analytica scandal. Following a joint investigation with British Columbia’s Information and Privacy Commissioner, the Commissioners had issued a Report of Findings in 2019. The Report concluded that Facebook had breached Canada’s Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA) and B.C.’s Personal Information Protection Act by failing to obtain appropriate consent, failing to adequately safeguard the data of its users and failing to be accountable for the data under its control. Under PIPEDA, the Privacy Commissioner has no order-making powers and can only make non-binding recommendations. For an order to be issued under PIPEDA, an application must be made to the Federal Court under s. 15, either by the complainant, or by the Privacy Commissioner with the complainant’s permission. The proceeding before the court is de novo, meaning that the court renders its own decision on whether there has been a breach of PIPEDA based upon the evidence presented to it.
The Cambridge Analytica scandal involved a researcher who developed a Facebook app. Through this app, the developer collected user data, ostensibly for research purposes. That data was later disclosed to third parties who used it to develop “psychographic” models for purposes of targeting political messages towards segments of Facebook users” (at para 35). It is important to note here that the complaint was not against the app developer, but rather against Facebook. Essentially, the complainants were concerned that Facebook did not adequately protect its users’ privacy. Although it had put in place policies and requirements for third party app developers, the complainants were concerned that it did not adequately monitor the third-party compliance with its policies.
The Federal Court dismissed the Privacy Commissioner’s application largely because of a lack of evidence to establish that Facebook had failed to meet its PIPEDA obligations to safeguard its users’ personal information. Referring to it as an “evidentiary vacuum” (para 71), Justice Manson found that there was a lack of expert evidence regarding what Facebook might have done differently. He also found that there was no evidence from users regarding their expectations of privacy on Facebook. The Court chastised the Commissioner, stating “ultimately it is the Commissioner’s burden to establish a breach of PIPEDA on the basis of evidence, not speculation and inferences derived from a paucity of material facts” (at para 72). Justice Manson found the evidence presented by the Commissioner to be unpersuasive, speculative, and required the court to draw “unsupported inferences”. He was unsympathetic to the Commissioner’s explanation that it did not use its statutory powers to compel evidence (under s. 12.1 of PIPEDA) because “Facebook would not have complied or would have had nothing to offer” (at para 72). Justice Manson noted that had Facebook failed to comply with requests under s. 12.1, the Commissioner could have challenged the refusal.
Yet there is more to this decision than just a dressing down of the Commissioner’s approach to the case. In discussing “meaningful consent” under PIPEDA, Justice Manson frames the question before the court as “whether Facebook made reasonable efforts to ensure users and users’ Facebook friends were advised of the purposes for which their information would be used by third-party applications” (at para 63). This argument is reflected in the Commissioner’s position that Facebook should have done more to ensure that third party app developers on its site complied with their contractual obligations, including those that required developers to obtain consent from app users to the collection of personal data. Facebook’s position was that PIPEDA only requires that it make reasonable efforts to protect the personal data of its users, and that it had done so through its “combination of network-wide policies, user controls and educational resources” (at para 68). It is here that Justice Manson emphasizes the lack of evidence before him, noting that it is not clear what else Facebook could have reasonably been expected to do. In making this point, he states:
There is no expert evidence as to what Facebook could feasibly do differently, nor is there any subjective evidence from Facebook users about their expectations of privacy or evidence that any user did not appreciate the privacy issues at stake when using Facebook. While such evidence may not be strictly necessary, it would have certainly enabled the Court to better assess the reasonableness of meaningful consent in an area where the standard for reasonableness and user expectations may be especially context dependent and ever-evolving. (at para 71) [My emphasis].
This passage should be deeply troubling to those concerned about privacy. By referring to the reasonable expectation of privacy in terms of what users might expect in an ever-evolving technological context, Justice Manson appears to abandon the normative dimensions of the concept. His comments lead towards a conclusion that the reasonable expectation of privacy is an ever-diminishing benchmark as it becomes increasingly naïve to expect any sort of privacy in a data-hungry surveillance society. Yet this is not the case. The concept of the “reasonable expectation of privacy” has significant normative dimensions, as the Supreme Court of Canada reminds us in R. v. Tessling and in the case law that follows it. In Tessling, Justice Binnie noted that subjective expectations of privacy should not be used to undermine the privacy protections in s. 8 of the Charter, stating that “[e]xpectation of privacy is a normative rather than a descriptive standard.” Although this comment is made in relation to the Charter, a reasonable expectation of privacy that is based upon the constant and deliberate erosion of privacy would be equally meaningless in data protection law. Although Justice Manson’s comments about the expectation of privacy may not have affected the outcome of this case, they are troublesome in that they might be picked up by subsequent courts or by the Personal Information and Data Protection Tribunal proposed in Bill C-27.
The decision also contains at least two observations that should set off alarm bells with respect to Bill C-27, a bill to reform PIPEDA. Justice Manson engages in some discussion of the duty of an organization to safeguard information that it has disclosed to a third party. He finds that PIPEDA imposes obligations on organizations with respect to information in their possession, and information transferred for processing. In the case of prospective business transactions, an organization sharing information with a potential purchaser must enter into an agreement to protect that information. However, Justice Manson interprets this specific reference to a requirement for such an agreement to mean that “[i]f an organization were required to protect information transferred to third parties more generally under the safeguarding principle, this provision would be unnecessary” (at para 88). In Bill C-27, s. 39, for example, permits organizations to share de-identified (not anonymized) personal information with certain third parties without the knowledge or consent of individuals for ‘socially beneficial’ purposes without imposing any requirement to put in place contractual provisions to safeguard that information. The comments of Justice Manson clearly highlight the deficiencies of s. 39 which must be amended to include a requirement for such safeguards.
A second issue relates to the human-rights based approach to privacy which both the former Privacy Commissioner Daniel Therrien and the current Commissioner Philippe Dufresne have openly supported. Justice Manson acknowledges, that the Supreme Court of Canada has recognized the quasi-constitutional nature of data protection laws such as PIPEDA, because “the ability of individuals to control their personal information is intimately connected to their individual autonomy, dignity, and privacy” (at para 51). However, neither PIPEDA nor Bill C-27 take a human-rights based approach. Rather, they place personal and commercial interests in personal data on the same footing. Justice Manson states: “Ultimately, given the purpose of PIPEDA is to strike a balance between two competing interests, the Court must interpret it in a flexible, common sense and pragmatic manner” (at para 52). The government has made rather general references to privacy rights in the preamble of Bill C-27 (though not in any preamble to the proposed Consumer Privacy Protection Act) but has steadfastly refused to reference the broader human rights context of privacy in the text of the Bill itself. We are left with a purpose clause that acknowledges “the right of privacy of individuals with respect to their personal information” in a context in which “significant economic activity relies on the analysis, circulation and exchange of personal information”. The purpose clause finishes with a reference to the need of organizations to “collect, use or disclose personal information for purposes that a reasonable person would consider appropriate in the circumstances.” While this reference to the “reasonable person” should highlight the need for a normative approach to reasonable expectations as discussed above, the interpretive approach adopted by Justice Manson also makes clear the consequences of not adopting an explicit human-rights based approach. Privacy is thrown into a balance with commercial interests without fundamental human rights to provide a firm backstop.
Justice Manson seems to suggests that the Commissioner’s approach in this case may flow from frustration with the limits of PIPEDA. He describes the Commissioner’s submissions as “thoughtful pleas for well-thought-out and balanced legislation from Parliament that tackles the challenges raised by social media companies and the digital sharing of personal information, not an unprincipled interpretation from this Court of existing legislation that applies equally to a social media giant as it may apply to the local bank or car dealership.” (at para 90) They say that bad cases make bad law; but bad law might also make bad cases. The challenge is to ensure that Bill C-27 does not reproduce or amplify deficiencies in PIPEDA.