tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6273930.post7655837929254689890..comments2024-03-08T07:29:54.585-04:00Comments on Canadian Privacy Law Blog: Alberta court declares portions of provincial privacy law unconstitutionalprivacylawyerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03943567746055311435noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6273930.post-68511731853315631932013-05-08T01:27:00.568-03:002013-05-08T01:27:00.568-03:00So my under age daughter was photographed my a rep...So my under age daughter was photographed my a reporter who got her under age permission to publish her photo with her full name and where she attends church. It was on the front page of the newspaper. How can this be legally ok? The schools ask for permission to publish photos and names of my children, but the local newspaper can do whatever they want here in Alberta? How is this ok? Because they want to sell newspapers they can put my daughter at risk (who now has had a predator try to contact her btw)? This is absurd! This shouldn't be allowed. Redfredhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11158701119470951218noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6273930.post-44393024995506260302011-09-06T22:44:59.252-03:002011-09-06T22:44:59.252-03:00Sounds like a good decision to me. I think more se...Sounds like a good decision to me. I think more sense needs to be made of the 'publicly available' exception to privacy rules. I can see other courts disagreeing on how much constitutional content privacy laws have, but one could still come to the same result without agreeing with the AB court on that point.John Gnoreply@blogger.com