October 5, 2021
Do you need checklists and precedents to help your company or organization comply with some of the common business-related exemptions and categories of implied consent under Canada’s federal anti-spam legislation (CASL)?
Our firm offers many types of precedents/forms to help companies, associations, other types of organizations and individuals comply with CASL, including our Common Business-Related Exemptions and Implied Consent checklists and precedents.
This CASL (Canadian anti-spam law) Checklist and Precedents Package includes checklists for common business-related exemptions and types of implied consent: the business-to-business exemption, existing business relationship implied consent (purchases and product inquiries), “business card” implied consent and “conspicuous publication” implied consent. Also included is precedent language that can be used in agreements between organizations to document the business-to-business exemption. Five pages.
For more information or to order our Common Business-Related Exemptions and Implied Consent checklists and precedents, as well as information about our other Canadian CASL precedents, checklists and CASL compliance program available for download, see: Canadian CASL (Anti-Spam Law) Precedents and Forms.
For more information about Canadian anti-spam law (CASL), see: Anti-Spam Law (CASL), Anti-Spam Law Compliance, Anti-Spam Law (CASL) Compliance Tips, Common Anti-Spam Law (CASL) Compliance Errors and Anti-Spam Law (CASL) FAQs.
If you need CASL advice for a marketing campaign or other electronic marketing, contact us: Contact.
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We are a Toronto based competition and advertising law firm offering business and individual clients efficient and strategic advice in relation to competition/antitrust, advertising, Internet and new media law and contest law. We also offer competition and regulatory law compliance, education and policy services to companies, trade and professional associations and government agencies.
Our experience includes advising clients in Toronto, Canada and the United States on the application of Canadian competition and regulatory laws and we have worked on hundreds of domestic and cross-border competition, advertising and marketing, promotional contest (sweepstakes), conspiracy (cartel), abuse of dominance, compliance, refusal to deal and pricing and distribution matters. For more information about our competition and advertising law services see: competition law services.
To contact us about a potential legal matter, see: contact
For more information about our firm, visit our website: Competitionlawyer.ca