Thank you, Chair.
Thank you for the invitation to speak to you today regarding identity theft.
As you mentioned, I'm the director general of the office of consumer affairs, which is a part of the strategic policy sector at Industry Canada.
I would like to discuss a number of the activities and initiatives that the department is involved in with a view to protecting consumers in regard to identity theft.
I will begin my remarks by touching upon the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act, and describing how this law helps to protect Canadians from identity theft. Secondly, I'd like to briefly discuss certain elements of Canada's anti-spam legislation, a law for which a number of federal actors are responsible. Finally, I'll touch briefly on certain information initiatives with which my office has been involved, including initiatives to help with public awareness in connection with the implementation of the anti-spam legislation.
First, I'd like to turn to the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act, or PIPEDA, as we call it. This law sets rules for the collection, use, and disclosure of personal information by private sector organizations, such as banks or phone companies, in the course of commercial activity. While the Minister of Industry is responsible for the law, it's the Privacy Commissioner of Canada, operating at arm's-length, who is responsible for enforcing and administering the act. As such, I would defer to the Privacy Commissioner for any issues respecting application of the law. That said, I will take a few moments to provide a brief overview of the act and how its requirements help to address identity theft.
The rules are based on 10 international and recognized principles for how organizations should best manage the personal information of their clients and customers. Many of these rules help protect consumers against threats like identity theft.
For example, the act requires that organizations only collect the information they need and retain it only for as long as necessary, to make sure that they are not maintaining databases of personal information that are not necessary and that would be vulnerable to loss or theft.
The act also requires that organizations put in place appropriate security safeguards to protect the personal information they hold against unauthorized access, loss, or theft. Such security measures, including the use of passwords or encryption of consumer data, help prevent the loss of personal information that is being used in identity theft.
In response to the first parliamentary review of PIPEDA, the government has committed to amending the act to create a new requirement for organizations to notify individuals if their personal information has been involved in a potentially harmful data breach. These amendments would ensure that consumers are informed when their personal information has been lost or stolen and would give them the information they need to protect themselves against identity theft, fraud, financial loss, or other forms of harm. The government remains committed to making these amendments, along with other changes recommended by Parliament in the first review.
I will now turn briefly to Canada's anti-spam law.
The law prohibits sending commercial electronic messages without consent. It also prohibits the installation of software on an other person's computer without consent. Together, these new prohibitions address nuisance spam messages.
Major concerns that the new law is intended to address include phishing messages, which are designed to lure recipients to counterfeit websites and trick them into revealing personal information, such as usernames, passwords, and account information; malware, which involves the installation of software on a person's computer, smart phone, or other digital device without their knowledge or consent—these types of spyware and viruses can secretly collect personal information that is then used in identity theft activities—and finally traffic rerouting, which involves secretly redirecting a person's online searches to a malicious destination where attackers can collect personal information for the purposes of carrying out identity thefts.
Most of the act will come into force on July 1 this year. Once the law is in force, it will help to protect Canadians while ensuring that businesses can continue to compete in the global marketplace. On January 15 of next year, sections of Canada's anti-spam legislation related to the unsolicited installation of computer programs or software will come into force. And then, the act's private right of action provisions will come into force on July 1, 2017. CASL will be enforced by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission or CRTC, the Competition Bureau, and the Office of the Privacy Commissioner.
The CRTC will enforce the law in respect to violations related to sending commercial electronic messages, altering transmission data, and installing computer programs without consent.
The Competition Bureau will investigate and take action against false and misleading representations and deceptive marketing practices.
The OPC will investigate the collection of personal information through illegal access to computer systems and electronic address harvesting.
I should note that a key element of the government's approach is preventing problems from occurring in the first place, and a key way to do that is to ensure that Canadians understand how to protect themselves. With this in mind, the government has set up a website, called www.fightspam.gc.ca, or www.combattrelepourriel.gc.ca.
In English it is www.fightspam.gc.ca.
The website includes information about the law itself and provides a number of information resources to Canadians. The website will also serve as the online home for the spam reporting centre, through which Canadians will be able to report on commercial electronic messages that have been sent without consent and commercial electronic messages with false or misleading content.
I would note, in addition, that a web-based advertising campaign has begun that will inform Canadians about the July 1 coming into force, and invite them to visit www.fightspam.gc.ca. You will find the introduction page from that website in your folders, as well as an image of the “Mobile Protection Tool Box.”
My own branch, the office of consumer affairs, has been involved in preparing communications efforts in respect of CASL. You will note in your packages, in your information kits, a series of infographics. The first, Worried it's SPAM? 5 Things to Look for, is geared to consumers to provide them with the basic information they need to avoid being taken in by fraud artists. It does so by setting out a number of common techniques used by spammers to obtain consumers' personal information. The infographic was printed and has been distributed to a large number of stakeholders, including other federal departments, provincial governments, with which we work quite closely on the consumer side, and community organizations.
The next three infographics in the kit, Does Canada's New Anti-Spam Law Apply?, 4 Tips for Contacting Clients Electronically, and 3 Things to Think About When Sending Messages,were created to help small and medium-sized enterprises know the basic requirements of the legislation and avoid being mistaken for spammers. These infographics, along with Worried it's Spam?, the one I just referred to, have been posted on the fightspam.gc.ca website and shared via the Industry Canada Twitter account.
Finally, an additional item in your packages is called the I.D. theft checklist.
In English, it is Identity Theft: A Checklist.
The list was prepared in collaboration with provincial and territorial officials and was distributed widely in recent years.
In conclusion, as I have noted, the government has taken a number of legislative measures aimed at protecting Canadians from identity theft. At the same time, an important part of the puzzle is awareness and education to ensure that Canadians have the right information they need to protect themselves.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.