Publication
La Cour suprême du Canada tranche : les cadres ne pourront se syndiquer au Québec
Le 19 avril dernier, la Cour suprême du Canada a rendu une décision fort attendue en matière de syndicalisation des cadres.
Mondial | Publication | March 7, 2016
It should come as no surprise to anyone who has used a mobile phone to pay for coffee or start a car that the world’s infrastructure is computerized and connected through the Internet and private networks. The connected world is in many ways more reliable and more efficient. For example, the use of “smart,” networked electricity meters that monitor home energy usage in real time has allowed utilities to reduce the need for additional power plants to meet energy demand. This technology also allows utilities to quickly pinpoint and resolve outages. At the same time, the increasingly connected electric grid is vulnerable to cyber threats, such as the recent attacks that disabled electric grids in Ukraine and Israel. These and other incidents demonstrate a key concern with cyber attacks on critical infrastructure—that virtual attacks perpetrated from across the planet using nothing more than a laptop keyboard can result in loss of life, and damage to property and economy.
From power plants to stock and commodity exchanges, from water treatment plants to aircrafts, the systems that make the world tick have been computerized and Internet-connected. Connectivity is what drives efficiency, and as connectivity increases—as it surely will—so too will cyber risks that threaten this critical infrastructure. The true potential for damage resulting from the exploitation of such cyber risks has catapulted the cybersecurity of critical infrastructure out of the virtual realm and into the minds of the public, Congress, regulators, trade groups and other stakeholders. While the United States has not yet experienced a large scale cyber attack resulting in massive loss of life or economic damage, a string of small incidents has helped all stakeholders to understand the devastating potential of an attack on critical infrastructure.
Read the full article: Ensuring cybersecurity of critical infrastructure
Publication
Le 19 avril dernier, la Cour suprême du Canada a rendu une décision fort attendue en matière de syndicalisation des cadres.
Publication
Le budget 2024 propose d’élargir la portée de certains pouvoirs permettant à l’ARC de demander des renseignements aux contribuables tout en prévoyant de nouvelles conséquences pour les contribuables contrevenants.
Publication
L'impôt minimum de remplacement (IMR) est un impôt sur le revenu additionnel prévu dans la Loi de l’impôt sur le revenu (Canada) (la « Loi ») auquel sont assujettis les particuliers et certaines fiducies qui pourraient autrement avoir recours à certaines déductions et exemptions et à certains crédits pour réduire leur impôt sur le revenu fédéral canadien régulier.
Abonnez-vous et restez à l’affût des nouvelles juridiques, informations et événements les plus récents...
© Norton Rose Fulbright LLP 2023