Canada · Nova Scotia

Locked out in Halifax?

If you live in Halifax, the same statutes that protect every Nova Scotia resident protect you. Here's exactly what to do — in the order to do it.

Step 1 — Know what's on your side

  • Competition Act, s. 74.01 (misleading representations)
    Marketing a free service as reliable while gating recovery behind a paid upgrade is a misleading representation in a material respect.
    Read the statute →
  • PIPEDA, Principle 9 (right of access)
    You have a statutory right to access your own personal information. A permanent automated lockout with no human reviewer is a refusal of access.
    Read the statute →
  • Consumer Protection Act (NS)
    Misleading or deceptive practices in trade are actionable, with the regulator empowered to investigate.

Step 2 — File where you live

These offices accept complaints from any resident of Nova Scotia, including Halifax. Filing is free.

Step 3 — Generate your letter

Our letter tool drafts a per-platform complaint you can paste into the regulator forms above, or attach as a PDF.

This page is generic by design — it does not name a specific case in Halifax. It exists so that searching "locked out of Google in Halifax" turns up an actionable page in your language and your jurisdiction instead of another forum thread that ends in "try recovery again." Nothing on this site is legal advice; for advice about your situation, talk to a licensed lawyer in Nova Scotia.

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