Similar pages:
- Law blogger posts online: Edmonton pawnshop owner takes a stand over electronic reporting of personal information of customers to police
- Law blogger posts online: Canadian Privacy Firsts: Misdirected faxes leads to joint investigation and report by Alberta and Federal Commissioners
- Law blogger posts online: Employees in Ontario (and perhaps other Canadian provinces) have no right to privacy
- Law blogger posts online: Privacy, hospitals and law enforcement
- Law blogger posts online: Meth addicts' other habit: Online theft
- Law blogger posts online: Alberta bureaucrat calls in the federal commissioner to investigate privacy breach
David Canton's weekly column in the London Free Press is devoted to implementing privacy-respectful merchandise return policies, following a recent decision from the Alberta Information and Privacy Commissioner that faulted two retailers. See: Return policies changed.
More related web entries for - Privacy compliant merchandise return policies:
- undefined
- Alberta bureaucrat calls in the federal commissioner to investigate privacy breach
- Alberta Commissioner to conduct his own "PATRIOT ACT" outsourcing inquiry
- Alberta Commissioner releases report on incident involving sensitive info of senior public servants
- Alberta Government 'dropped ball' on security breach
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- Don't be liable for identity theft
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- What your photocopier knows about you ...
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- I'll just run your card through our computer ...
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- Alberta Commissioner welcomes substantially similar finding
- Go ahead and complain to the privacy commissioner ...
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- Alberta and British Columbia privacy laws declared to be substantially similar
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