Canada’s proposed Consumer Privacy Protection Act, contained in Bill C-27, features an expansion of the definitions around such terms as an “identifiable” person, nNovation partner Shaun Brown writes. He said the proposed legislation is a “significant” but "unclear" change from the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act because the CPPA adds three legal concepts for personal information. When dealing with identifiable personal information, all requirements of the law are applicable; for deidentified personal information, some requirements are to be followed; and for anonymized information, the CPPA is not applicable.
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