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Updates to the Privacy Act coming as feds announce promised digital charter

WATCH: The federal government has unveiled its long-awaited digital charter, which aims to help protect Canadians and their personal data. As Mike Le Couteur reports, the plan will only become law if the Liberals are re-elected – May 21, 2019

Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains says the federal government will look to update the Privacy Act as part of an effort to build greater trust in the digital world.

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Bains made the commitment at Toronto’s Empire Club of Canada as part of a rollout of a ten-point digital charter aimed at protecting privacy and personal control of data.

READ MORE: Trudeau announces ‘digital charter,’ tells social media companies to fight fake news or be fined

He says that only though a foundation of trust will society be able to reach its full innovative potential.

To reach that aim, Bains says the government will review private sector privacy laws and look to ensure the Competition Bureau has proper enforcement tools.

WATCH BELOW: Digital world must be safe, transparent, accountable, private, says Trudeau

He says the government will also review the Statistics Act and launch a new Data Governance Standardization Collaborative to better manage data governance standards in the country.

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau first announced the digital charter last week, emphasizing the need to combat hate speech, misinformation and online electoral interference.

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