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|    mtl.general    |    Ahh Montreal, home of good strip joints    |    39,416 messages    |
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|    Message 39,296 of 39,416    |
|    Alan Baggett to All    |
|    Canada Revenue Agency monitoring Faceboo    |
|    25 Jan 17 04:32:58    |
      From: canada.revenueagency@yahoo.com              Canada Revenue Agency monitoring Facebook, Twitter posts of some Canadians        :CRA SOTW              Agency is increasingly turning to cutting-edge data analysis techniques to       improve service and 'compliance'              By Elizabeth Thompson, CBC News               The Canada Revenue Agency is scrutinizing the Facebook pages, Twitter feeds       and other social media posts of Canadians it suspects could be cheating on       their taxes.              That's just one example of the agency's increasing focus on what it can learn       by collecting and analyzing many kinds of data — both its own internally       generated information and what it calls "publicly available information."              "The CRA does practice risk-based compliance, so for taxpayers identified as       high risk, any relevant, publicly available information relating to the       specific risk-based factors for the taxpayer may be consulted as part of our       fact-gathering processes,"        said spokesperson David Walters.              Among those considered high risk are wealthy Canadians with offshore bank       accounts, said Jean-François Ruel, director of CRA's Strategy and Integration       Branch.              "If we go with high-risk, high-wealth individuals that do offshore [banking],       then we would look at all information that is public for compliance action."              Tobi Cohen, spokesperson for the privacy commissioner, said CRA notified it of       its plan to collect publicly available information from social media in       connection with "tax fraud and non-compliance risk analysis, audits and       investigations."              However, David Christopher, of the advocacy group Open Media, said his       organization opposes government agencies monitoring what Canadians are saying       on social media.              "When Canadians post something on Facebook, they believe that they are sharing       that with their friends and with their family. They don't believe that they       are sharing that with some government bureaucrat in Ottawa," he said.              "Unfortunately, Facebook's privacy settings are notoriously complex and many       people might think that they are posting something to their friends and it       ends up getting shared with the whole world."              The revelation that the Canada Revenue Agency is checking social media posts       comes as the agency is also expanding its use of cutting-edge technology and       data analysis to better catch tax cheats, to target people for audits and to       improve its service for        Canadians.              Big data       Business intelligence, also known as big data, is a rapidly growing area       within CRA. In 2016 alone, the agency posted three separate privacy impact       assessments centred on its plans to use business intelligence techniques in       its operations.              Andrew Treusch, who retired as CRA commissioner in June, previously wrote       about how technology is changing the way the tax agency operates. (CRA )              "Evolving technology is having a significant impact on our approach to       compliance," he wrote in the agency's 2016-17 Report on Planning and       Priorities.              "Data analysis and business intelligence are providing us with better insight       into taxpayer behaviours, allowing us to spend less time and effort on       lower-risk groups of taxpayers and focus our resources on dealing with       deliberate non-compliance."              In the report, the agency says business intelligence, which includes "mining       accessible data," is a key area.              "This is because of the far-reaching opportunities it presents to enhance       strategies for compliance, services and debt collection. Business intelligence       encompasses big data to improve non-compliance detection (predictive       analytics) and behavioural        economics (such as 'nudging') to improve compliance."              Future techniques       An internal CRA document, which CBC News first found on the website of the U.S       Internal Revenue Service, outlines CRA's plans to use business intelligence       techniques in the future.              The document, prepared in 2014, describes plans to move into such areas as       predictive analytics, which can use data and algorithms to help officials       decide whether someone who hasn't paid their taxes should get a gentle       reminder, a phone call or an audit.              A chart in the document indicates CRA also planned to get data to analyze from       "web and social media."              Ruel said while the agency was looking into the prospect at the time, it is       not currently planning to include social media analysis as part of the       business intelligence side of its operations.              "A lot of steps and a lot of work in terms of privacy would have to be done       first and it's not one of the priorities right now."              However, he said the business intelligence unit does analyze data from CRA's       interactions with Canadians through its own Twitter and YouTube accounts.              "When they communicate with us, we analyze this information to make sure that       we understand what is happening," Ruel said. "If there is concern around       scams, for example, we will take that information and then create a       communications strategy to make        sure that people have the information that they need."              Identifying offshore tax evasion       Ruel said the business intelligence section has a dual focus: improving       service for Canadians while at the same time identifying cases that should be       audited.              On the audit side, it is working extensively with data it has been receiving       from Canadian financial institutions since January 2015 whenever someone makes       an electronic transfer worth $10,000 or more.              The result has been a lot of information about countries of concern for       offshore tax evasion.              "If we look at the case and we see there are a lot of funds transfers toward a       country where we know there could be some offshore activities, then we link       that information with all the other information that we have and we prioritize       that way," Ruel said.              The agency has also begun text analytics, also known as text mining. For       example, Ruel said the business intelligence section is analyzing auditors'       notes to detect new tax schemes or techniques for avoiding taxes.              But as CRA and other federal departments increase their use of data, privacy       advocates say they should also be asking tough questions.              In a speech prepared for a conference in December, Patricia Kosseim, senior       general counsel at the Office of the Privacy Commissioner, warned that just       because something is publicly available online, doesn't mean individuals have       waived their rights to        privacy.                     [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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