| About Kris Klein |
|
Kris Klein, founder and principal of the Law Office of Kris Klein, is the editor and publisher of PrivacyScan. Kris Klein has more than a decade of experience in the federal regulatory arena, which he gained in both the public and private sectors in Canada. He is also one of the countrys leading experts on the application of the Access to Information Act, the Privacy Act, and the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA).
Kris practiced law with a preeminent, national firm delivering legal services at the highest levels for national and international clients. He also has a significant amount of litigation experience, working for the Federal Department of Justice, and he has also provided instrumental legal advice for the Privy Council Office. |
| More recently, Kris practiced exclusively in the area of privacy law for the Privacy Commissioner of Canada. In his capacity as litigation counsel, Kris advised the Commissioner and senior officials on legal, policy and strategic positions available in privacy matters, including the handling of high-profile and sensitive cases. In addition, he interacted, negotiated and settled complaints with private sector organizations facing complaints about privacy issues. Kris also represented the Commissioner and her office publicly, as a conference speaker, before Parliamentary committee and in interviews with the media.
Kris has broad public and private sector experience, working on projects that have required understanding, negotiating and monitoring technical compliance with privacy and security issues. He has a demonstrated understanding of technology, theories of anonymity (de-identification of data), authentication systems, health privacy issues, etc.
He has written extensively on the subject, including co-authoring several instrumental works. Moreover, Kris is the Managing Director of IAPP Canada, he teaches the Privacy Law course at Ottawa University's Law School, and he has provided countless in-house training sessions to corporations and government departments. He is an entertaining speaker that engages the audience and provides practical advice to real-world problems.
Kris is native to Ottawa and studied in a specialized Geographic Information Systems program at Carleton University before attending law school. He is active within his community and serves on the Board of Directors of Bronson Centre, the Board of Directors of the Canadian Lacrosse Foundation, and coaches minor hockey and soccer. |
| |
|
| About Shaun Brown |
|
PrivacyScan is also written by Shaun Brown, counsel with the Law Office of Kris Klein. Shaun has several years of experience dealing with e-commerce, Internet, privacy and security-related issues from both a policy and legal perspective.
Having articled at a national law firm, he has worked both in government and in the private sector. He has extensive knowledge of Canadian privacy laws, and has advised the federal government with respect to anti-spam policy, as well as amendments to the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act. Shaun advises and litigates in all of these arenas of law, in addition to access to information law. |
| |
|
| About Murray Long |
Murray Long is the founder of PrivacyScan, which he began publishing in 1998. Murray Long is one of Canada's foremost private sector privacy experts. As a member of the Canadian Standards Association (CSA) privacy committee, he helped write the CSA Model Code for the Protection of Personal Information, which is the basis for the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA) and subsequent provincial laws.
In 1997, he started his own consulting practice and in 1998 he started PrivacyScan, an electronic news journal designed to provide information to readers about PIPEDA. Today, PrivacyScan continues to provide timely and useful information on privacy issues in Canada. Since 1997, Murray has provided guidance on privacy law compliance to organizations in the telecommunications, banking and insurance, transportation, retailing, franchising, healthcare, employment privacy, and charity sectors.
He has undertaken numerous policy research, privacy review, privacy impact and training projects for the federal and provincial governments as well as private firms. |
|