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As Canada’s digital economy continues to evolve, privacy law is entering a critical period of transition. With the collapse of Bill C-27 in 2024, early 2025 has left legal professionals navigating a fragmented and uncertain regulatory landscape. Without a modernized federal privacy framework or AI-specific legislation, the burden now shifts to provinces, regulators, and the courts to fill the gap.
Bill C-27 was designed to overhaul Canada’s federal privacy regime by introducing the Consumer Privacy Protection Act (CPPA) and the Artificial Intelligence and Data Act (AIDA). Its failure to pass has left the outdated Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA) in place, with no clear roadmap for regulating AI or modern data practices.
Legal professionals advising clients in data-driven sectors should take proactive steps to prepare for a shifting regulatory environment:
Conclusion:
The failure of Bill C-27 has created both uncertainty and opportunity. Legal professionals have a critical role to play in guiding clients through this transitional period—ensuring compliance today while preparing for the regulatory frameworks of tomorrow.
To learn more, click here for on-demand access to our July 2025 featured webinar on Navigating AI & Privacy Law in Canada conversation, with subject matter experts Danielle Miller Olofsson and Timothy M. Banks. This jam-packed, 1 hour conversation provides insight to Canada’s evolving AI and privacy law landscape, including what’s enforceable now and what’s on the horizon. To conclude, we provide thoughts on advising clients or organizations on compliance, risk, and ethical AI use in the fragmented regulatory environment.