Over the past week, a growing number of tech companies have warned that they may be forced to leave Canada if Bill C-22, the lawful access bill, remains unchanged. The government’s response to warnings from Signal, Windscribe, NordVPN, Apple, and Meta is that the companies are misreading the bill. But the prospect of a tech exodus from Canada rests on clear-cut privacy and security risks that do not apply in the U.S. or Europe.
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The Act’s definition of “electronic service provider” captures any service involving the creation, recording, storage, processing, transmission, or reception of information, provided either to persons in Canada or by an entity carrying on business activities in Canada.
The breadth intentionally covers far more than just telecom companies and internet providers, extending to platforms, messaging applications, VPN services, and device manufacturers. Every ESP is subject to a general assistance obligation under section 7 and to a secrecy obligation that bars disclosure of the existence of requests.
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[Signal’s Vice President of Strategy and Global Affairs Udbhav] Tiwari put the point bluntly in his statement to the Globe: “End-to-end encryption is incompatible with exceptional access, no matter how creative the route taken to achieve it.”
What places the Canadian tech sector at risk of an exodus is that U.S. law imposes neither obligation. There is no federal mandatory data retention law in the United States, as the Electronic Frontier Foundation has documented across more than a decade of failed legislative proposals. The closest analog, the preservation provision in 18 U.S.C. § 2703(f) of the Stored Communications Act, allows the government to compel a provider to preserve existing records for up to 90 days while it obtains a court order, with a single 90-day extension available. It is a reactive, targeted mechanism tied to a specific account, not a forward-looking retention mandate covering every user of the service.
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A U.S.-based VPN or messaging service can therefore lawfully maintain a no-log approach, which is precisely how the no-log policies are built. Given the choice, VPNs and other services will surely leave Canada rather than architect their systems to retain metadata on every single user for a year.
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In Europe, the Court of Justice of the European Union struck down general data retention regimes in Digital Rights Ireland in 2014 and Tele2 Sverige in 2016, and has continued to constrain them in later rulings. Germany’s Federal Constitutional Court has imposed similar limits, and general retention obligations on email providers remain unlawful there. The jurisdictions that have moved in C-22’s direction are precisely the ones where major services have begun to exit or restrict features.
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The United Kingdom’s Investigatory Powers Act sparked Apple’s withdrawal of its Advanced Data Protection feature from the U.K. market rather than comply with a Technical Capability Notice ordering it to create access to encrypted iCloud data, and Apple is now litigating that order before the Investigatory Powers Tribunal.
Switzerland’s recent attempt to extend its surveillance ordinance to VPN providers and encrypted messaging services prompted Proton to begin moving infrastructure out of the country to Germany before the Swiss Federal Council paused the amendment pending an impact study. Where jurisdictions impose obligations of the kind Bill C-22 contains, privacy-protective services have either left, scaled back, or restricted features.
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The compliance obligations on Canadian electronic service providers under Bill C-22 do not apply to a U.S.-based competitor, are limited or unconstitutional in much of Europe, and have led to exits or feature withdrawals in jurisdictions that have imposed them.
The companies aren’t bluffing, and they aren’t misreading the bill. Rather, they are responding to an outlier approach that threatens the Canadian tech landscape with obligations that place the privacy and security of millions at risk.



I’m already prepping for an Internet less world, or at least EXTREMELY limited…
books, guitar, drums, banjo, jellyfinn media libraries… all offline accessable. saving/backing up more and more data daily to ensure decades of entertainment without corporations trying to rape me further
when shit really gets fucked, I’m out… I’ll return randomly to check on the status of the local meshtastic network and see everyone there.
I do not want to live and play, into he same areas as governments or corporations any longer.
You might find project nomad interesting too: https://github.com/Crosstalk-Solutions/project-nomad It’s very docker-heavy which I don’t love but even as just an idea for stuff you can download manually it’s got some good ideas. Among the most important stuff there is lots of learning materials and honestly I’d recommend an AI model or few too.
We can discuss why I’d bother to recommend that, even if you hate AI, but I’d suggest keeping an open mind to these AI datasets that are effectively statistical models of all content they’ve been trained on. Statistical models can be very useful to collect huge amounts of data and information into a relatively small space, even if they don’t have perfect accuracy and aren’t universally applicable. Even if you can’t imagine a use personally right now, even if you don’t have the hardware to run it, grabbing a few more gigabytes that you might find to contain valuable statistical weights someday in the future might be worth the download and storage. Demographics don’t become useless just because they can’t accurately predict whether they apply to any given individual, and what are essentially the demographics of all information humanity has ever recorded on the internet can still be viewed as deeply interesting, regardless of how ethically they are being collected and used.
And as you seem to be interested in the entertainment stuff, I’d also recommend downloading an archive of GameFAQs (at least the text-only portions of it, which are shockingly small, only a few gigabytes which is smaller than many entire games nowadays) and as many libraries of retro games as you can get, including ROMs and old PC abandonware that can be emulated in Dosbox etc.
But at the end of the day I really don’t think they’ll completely collapse the internet. We will find ways to get our message out there to each other. Meshtastic is great. I2P is great. But I think it’s realistically impossible for the internet to ever become as completely locked down as people fear. We can and will become ungovernable. They can’t stop the signal. They’ve never been able to in the past and they’re never going to be able to. The resistance has become widespread, and the tighter their grasp becomes, the more will slip through their fingers.
I honestly thought I was the only one willing to give up my net connection over this.
you should look into meshtastic and have a node ready to go live.
https://meshtastic.org/
‘internet’ (not really) without any isp or corporate garbage… literally free communication between other meshtastic folks to communicate and share knowledge/information/data etc…
Did you stop reading halfway through before they mentioned coming back every now and then to check the state of things…on a meshtastic network?
Yup. PS4 is becoming an emulator. PS5 will probably become a linux PC.