Yanik Guillemette — "Bill C-22 is a First Step Toward Authoritarian Surveillance That Will Trigger a Mass Exodus of Tech Headquarters"

Yanik Guillemette — "Bill C-22 is a First Step Toward Authoritarian Surveillance That Will Trigger a Mass Exodus of Tech Headquarters" Yanik Guillemette — "Bill C-22 is a First Step Toward Authoritarian Surveillance That Will Trigger a Mass Exodus of Tech Headquarters" GlobeNewswire May 26, 2026

Yanik Guillemette in Dubaï

MONTREAL, May 26, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- As international scrutiny intensifies around Canada’s proposed Bill C-22, a growing coalition of global technology leaders, cybersecurity companies, and international lawmakers are warning that the legislation could severely damage Canada’s digital economy.

Canadian technology entrepreneur and strategic investor Yanik Guillemette warns that the proposed legislation paints Canada in the same light as countries like China and Vietnam, notorious for their invasive state surveillance. He states that the debate surrounding Bill C-22 has evolved far beyond privacy concerns, rapidly becoming a defining economic issue for Canada’s future competitiveness in artificial intelligence (AI), cloud infrastructure, and cybersecurity.

Yanik Guillemette on the Economic Reality of Bill C-22
"We are witnessing one of the largest collisions between government surveillance ambitions and digital economic reality in modern Canadian history," said Yanik Guillemette. "In the real world, this type of bill is always a first step toward systemic abuse. By pushing legislation that echoes authoritarian surveillance states, the government is initiating a mass exodus of corporate headquarters and market presence. The message from the global tech sector is becoming impossible to ignore: countries perceived as hostile to encryption and digital privacy will lose infrastructure, capital, talent, and strategic relevance".
Several major technology companies and digital privacy organizations have now publicly opposed portions of Bill C-22, citing severe risks to data sovereignty and encryption standards.

Global Tech Leaders and VPN Providers React to Bill C-22
Concurrently, major Virtual Private Network (VPN) providers are signaling an exodus:

The controversy surrounding Bill C-22 is now extending well beyond Canada’s borders. Reports indicate that the Chair of the U.S. House Judiciary Committee and the Chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee have begun examining the legislation and its potential implications for cross-border digital security, data governance, and international business operations.
"Modern economies run on trust," Yanik Guillemette emphasized. "If Canada becomes associated with mandatory access regimes or systemic surveillance vulnerabilities, companies will simply deploy elsewhere. The infrastructure of the future is mobile".
"There is no such thing as a secure backdoor," Yanik Guillemette added. "Every exceptional access mechanism eventually becomes an attack surface. That is not ideology, it is basic security architecture".

About Yanik Guillemette
Yanik Guillemette is a Montreal-based tech entrepreneur and strategic investor who contributes to the strategic development of various companies. Specializing in AI adoption for SMEs, digital infrastructure, and North American Trade & Economy, he is widely recognized for his advocacy surrounding long-term technological tools, digital sovereignty, and the economic implications of public policy.

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/6ffe1622-e7f6-4e61-8bff-27d4fed714d7


Media Contact:
Name: Julie Tessier
Email: yanik@yanikguillemette.com
Website: www.yanikguillemette.com