Canada · Quebec
Locked out in Saint-Jerome?
If you live in Saint-Jerome, the same statutes that protect every Quebec 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 →
- Loi sur la protection du consommateur (Quebec CPA)Article 219 — no merchant may, by any means whatever, make false or misleading representations to a consumer.Read the statute →
- Loi 25 (formerly Bill 64) — access & portabilityQuebec residents have an enforceable right to access and port their personal information.
Step 2 — File where you live
These offices accept complaints from any resident of Quebec, including Saint-Jerome. Filing is free.
- Competition Bureau Canada →Federal — file from anywhere in Canada.
- Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada →Federal PIPEDA complaints.
- Office de la protection du consommateur →
- Commission d'accès à l'information →
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 Saint-Jerome. It exists so that searching "locked out of Google in Saint-Jerome" 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 Quebec.