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Archives for October 2011

By Adam Gorley | 2 Minutes Read October 24, 2011

Personal information online: new tools, old responsibilities

Sometimes, technology creates new ways to exploit information faster than the law and business can keep up. The Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada is trying to make sure that doesn't happen in the case of behavioural advertising. Last year, the Privacy Commissioner conducted consultations on the new ways that organizations are collecting and using customers' personal information, and prepared its Report on the 2010 Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada's Consultations on Online Tracking, Profiling and Targeting, and Cloud Computing.

Article by Adam Gorley / Privacy / behavioural advertising, marketing, mobile technology, Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner, oipc, privacy, Privacy Commissioner, profiling, targeting, technology, tracking

By David Hyde | 9 Minutes Read October 21, 2011

Landmark decision gives insight into workplace harassment and employer reprisal

The Ontario Labour Relations Board has provided what some believe to be the most significant legal interpretation yet of workplace harassment and employer reprisal in the context of the recently enacted Bill 168 amendments to the Occupational Health and Safety Act (OHSA). The case, Conforti v. Investia Financial Services Inc., 2011, was decided on September 23, 2011.

Article by David Hyde / Employee Relations, Health and Safety, Human Rights / Bill 168, compliance, discipline, employment law, harassing email, occupational health and safety act, OHSA, ontario, reprisal, right to refuse work, risk assessment, termination, termination for cause, termination for harassment complaint, vexatious comment or conduct, whistleblowing, workplace harassment, workplace harassment investigation, workplace violence

By Henry J. Chang, Dentons LLP | 3 Minutes Read October 20, 2011

CIC finally allows recaptured time for intracompany transferees

On September 19, 2011, Citizenship and Immigration Canada published Operational Bulletin 346, which authorized the recapture of unused time that would otherwise count against the time limits that are normally imposed on intracompany transferees. As a result of Operational Bulletin 346, now only periods of physical presence in Canada while holding an intracompany transferee work permit will count towards the time limits.

Article by Henry J. Chang, Dentons LLP / Immigration / Canadian Border Services Agency, CBSA, CIC, Citizenship and Immigration Canada, employment law, foreign nationals, intracompany transferees, NAFTA, Operational Bulletin 346, recapture of unused time, Temporary Foreign Worker Guidelines

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