Canadian’s Election Will Be on Twitter

It will also be illegal for any citizen, journalist or not, to tweet or blog or post something on a Facebook wall about the election results, until all the polls are shut.

Ordinary citizens aren’t immune. In 2000, Elections Canada brought charges against a Vancouver blogger and software designer named Paul Bryan after he dared to publish election results from Atlantic Canada on his small-audience blog. Bryan was fined $1,000. He fought the case all the way to the Supreme Court on constitutional grounds, with major media outlets from across the country joining his battle. It did no good. In 2007, by a vote of 5-4, the court upheld Bryan’s conviction, and Section 329.

The four minority judges were passionate in their dissent.

By Paula Simons in “Ban on Twitter, Facebook election-night posts draconian“, April 20, 2011

This election will be tweeted. I’m hopeful that Elections Canada will act appropriately, by not acting. Then the newly elected government can fix these laws.

Read the Prologue, Looking to Twitter to Continue the Dialogue

Everyday it seems I get an email saying that someone is following me on Twitter. I’ve resisted using any of Twitter, Pownce, Jaiku, and Facebook status tools… much.

Now, I’m taking another look. Why? Because of the WordPress Prologue Theme.

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