Regarding the signing of the documents (Convention of Consent, Letter to the UK, Letter to the Supreme Court):
Q: What is the personal stake if I sign the documents.
A: Nothing, you have no risk to anything personal in signing the documents. Your information remains private. As these are not petitions, you are signing stating you want your Collective Civil and Political Rights, your individual and collective right to self-determination and self-governance (holding government accountable) as in international law and our Constitution. You are signing that you are united, with everyone else who signs, in wanting this for your country. It is an agreement between you and everyone else who signs that will be used to determine that the majority in Canada want their Collective Rights as the Collective Head of State, which will decolonize Canada.
Q: I went to read the terms of use, but I want to check with you what the term digital signature is legally binding?
A: It just means that signing digitally is recognized as a "valid signature"...so you are agreeing to be part of the collective majority for Collective Civil and Political rights, self-determination and self-governance (holding government accountable)
E-Signature is generally valid and enforceable for documents and contracts in Canada, subject to certain exceptions outlined in question 2 below. The validity/enforceability of electronic signatures in Canada is governed by laws that are generally applicable to electronic contracts. These include legislation specific to electronic transactions, as well as traditional common law principles and legislation applicable to contracts generally.
All of the Canadian provinces and territories have enacted electronic transactions statutes:
Alberta: Electronic Transactions Act, SE 2001, c E-5.5
British Columbia: Electronic Transactions Act, SBC 2001, c 10
Manitoba: Electronic Commerce and Information, SM 2000, c 32
New Brunswick: Electronic Transactions Act, RSNB 2000, c 145
Newfoundland and Labrador: Electronic Commerce Act (An Act to Facilitate Electronic Commerce by Removing Barriers to the Use of Electronic Communication), SNL 2001, c E-5.2
Nova Scotia: Electronic Commerce Act, SNS 2000, c 26
Northwest Territories: Electronic Transactions Act, SNWT 2011, c 13
Nunavut: Electronic Commerce Act, SNu 2004, c 7
Ontario: Electronic Commerce Act, 2000, SO 2000, c 17
Prince Edward Island: Electronic Commerce Act, RSPEI 1988, c E-4.1
Quebec: An Act to establish a legal framework for information technology, CQLR c C-1.1
Saskatchewan: The Electronic Information and Documents Act, 2000, SS 2000, c E-7.22
Yukon Territory: Electronic Commerce Act, RSY 2002, c 66
With the exception of Quebec, these statutes are based substantially on the model Uniform Electronic Commerce Act (“UECA”), which was adopted by the Uniform Law Conference of Canada in 1999 and which sets out the basic premise that information shall not be denied legal effect or enforceability solely by reason that it is in electronic form.
The federal Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act, SC 2000, c 5 (“PIPEDA”), also applies to the use of electronic signatures but only in the context of signature requirements under prescribed federal statutes and regulations.