Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I will move the notice of motion that this committee undertake a study, of at least four meetings, on the transfer of personal consumer and subscriber information from Canadian telecom providers to the Canadian government, as disclosed by the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada, and this committee report its findings and recommendations to the House.
I think it is somewhat timely that we discuss it. We had the Information Commissioner here today.
Let me state that this is not a gotcha motion. This is not trying to embarrass the government in any form, because one of the things the Information Commissioner told us this morning is that this information is being transferred to municipal agencies and other agencies as well; we really don't know. There's often good reason for information to be provided to our law enforcers and Canada Border Services.
The intent is to make sure that this information is being transferred in a proper format. What concerns us is that the Information Commissioner states that there's no way of knowing if these government agencies and telecommunications and social media companies are following the rules. We should take a look at that, and see if they are following the rules or if the rules need to be tightened up a little. It's of some genuine interest.
We know about warrant lists and warrant disclosures of information. Often there are important reasons for government agencies to work quickly and not get a warrant to request this information. We understand that. But when you see the sheer volume of these requests, I think some bells and whistles should go off that maybe we have a problem here. Is there a better way? How do these requests happen?
From my understanding, a telecommunications company puts certain information to the side, and law enforcement agencies can have free rein to look at that information. Is that something we need to tighten up on? We really don't know.
I commend the government; there are a few bills before the Senate and before Parliament right now that will look at some of this information as it comes forward. That's a side issue; that's something we'll look forward to seeing make its way through the Senate, and into the House...to disclose some of that information.
It's about oversight. Right now there doesn't seem to be a lot of oversight on this, and no court oversight. Yes, the judicial system does apply for warrants for this, but not 1.2 million times, not 800 times. How many times are warrants being asked for and given? Is that taking up a lot of the time of our judicial system? We don't know because we don't know how many of these are warrants and how much is warrant-less information.
I think we should take a short study of this, four meetings, to see if there's more to this. As I said, it's not trying to “get” the government, because I think we all have an opportunity to look at things in this House, and if our Information Commissioner and our Privacy Commissioner are feeling their hands are tied, it's our duty to look into this.
One of the things that has come up for much debate is basic subscriber information from Internet service providers. Well, what is basic subscriber information? As we dive into this, we know it's your name, address, e-mail, and IP address. We had a little discussion this morning about the IP address as a very, very detailed piece of personal information—maybe, maybe not, but we should look into it.
From what experts are telling us, it goes beyond that basic subscriber information. It goes into transmission data or metadata. The analogy that's being used is that's the information on the outside of the envelope from Canada Post: to, from, and when, as in when something was sent, whether it's e-mail or a phone call; it's that information. That's getting into grounds where we need to see if that should require a warrant or not, and it's of some concern.
You know, it's a genuine motion. I think we as parliamentarians should have a look at this. The committee is probably the best spot to look at this to see if there's more to this than meets the eye. I do take the government for their word that most of this is being done on a warranted basis, and I hope it would be. We should just peel back the onion a little bit here and see if there is more to this than really meets the eye.
That gives you an overview of the situation. I think we're all familiar with the information around it. It's our duty to ask some questions and get some more answers on this, especially when it comes to, as the motion says, subscriber information. Let's see how broad or narrow that definition is and whether that is causing the Canadian telecommunications companies some leeway.
One of the things is that the Information Commissioner wrote 13 companies and social media companies as well. They're not telecom companies. Only nine responded and four didn't even bother to respond to the information commissioner.
So she's given us an opportunity to look into this as an area of concern. I think it's something that we should take at least four meetings to dive into to see if there's something to this or not and give it the due diligence that it needs.