Former Toronto Police Board Chair: Cybercrime protections need updating for the 21st century
By
Alok Mukherjee, Contributor
Summary
This article appears to be a very short snippet or placeholder content, not a full article. The title suggests a first-person account about being scammed while serving as chair of the Toronto Police Service Board, arguing for better Canadian cybercrime protections. However, the actual body content contains only form fields (State, Postal Code, Country) and a brief tagline about a 21st century problem requiring a 21st century approach. The word count is only 20 words, making it impossible to extract meaningful quotes or substantive analysis.
Source
Key quotes
· 1 pulledA 21st century problem requires a 21st century approach.
You might also wanna read
Italy's privacy watchdog, scourge of US big tech, hit by corruption probe
Canadian privacy regulators find TikTok's child protection measures inadequate in joint investigation
A joint investigation by Canadian privacy authorities (Privacy Commissioner of Canada and counterparts in Quebec, British Columbia, and Albe
What Is Bill C-26 And What Does It Mean For Canadian Cybersecurity?
UK Government Exempts Itself from Cyber Security Legislation Despite Growing Public Sector Threats
The article analyzes the UK government's controversial decision to exempt itself from its own flagship Cyber Security and Resilience (CSR) B
Age verification laws as a step toward mandatory real-name speech attribution
The article argues that age verification regulations being introduced in US states, European countries, and Australia are not genuinely abou

Canada's Bill C-22: A Poorly Designed Lawful Access Bill Being Rushed Through Committee
The article is a critical analysis of Canada's Bill C-22, a government lawful access bill. It argues that the bill is poorly designed, lacks

Comments
Sign in to join the conversation.
No comments yet. Be the first.