Thank you, Chair, for the opportunity to appear before you and for doing this important work.
I'm Karim Bardeesy. I'm the executive director of The Dais, a policy and leadership think tank at Toronto Metropolitan University, working on the bold ideas and better leaders Canada needs for more shared prosperity and citizenship. We work in areas of economic, education and democracy policy.
I'll be drawing on my remarks from two studies we've done recently: one supported by the Privy Council Office's democratic institution secretariat as part of our annual DemocracyXChange summit, and another one supported by the Department of Canadian Heritage's digital citizen initiative, the "Survey of Online Harms".
I make three points.
First, the state of the threat of foreign or external misinformation and disinformation is real, ever-changing and points, as Professor Bradshaw said, at specific communities triggering specific identities. Canada's national cyber threat assessment describes online foreign influence activities as a “new normal”, and some of this is difficult to detect. For instance, disinfo and misinfo on private messaging platforms are more likely to reach specific cultural communities or identity groups, and they're harder, by their very nature, to study. The design of these platforms also makes it more difficult for the users, who are concerned that there may be misinfo or disinfo on those platforms...to be flagged for content concern.
There are also a number of new vectors, and some came to the public's attention only through judicial actions in other countries. Professor Bradshaw mentioned Russian disinfo, so you're probably aware that the U.S. justice department recently charged two employees of RT, a Russian state-controlled media outlet, not for its own content but in a U.S. $10-million scheme to create and distribute content with hidden Russian government messaging. Some of these payments, as you're probably aware, went to prominent Canadian YouTubers, but the extent of this deception was only revealed thanks to the discovery that accompanies criminal proceedings.
Prominent online actors can also play an important role in spreading foreign misinfo and disinfo. A recent study by Reset Tech shows that Elon Musk's personal engagement with content can amplify, 250 or morefold, the audience that a piece of foreign misinfo or disinfo receives out in the real world.
Another new vector are deepfakes, again, with some of the old techniques but now fuelled by powerful AI algorithms that are available to many at low or no cost. Our recent study of online harm showed that 60% of Canadian residents said they have seen a deepfake online, with 23% reporting seeing deepfakes more than a couple of times a week. That kind of exposure to deepfakes is correlated with the use of social media platforms like Facebook, YouTube, X, TikTok as well as ChatGPT.
Second, how do we respond to the threat? It's real, it's coming in multiple forms and those forms are constantly evolving. On this, our report has a number of recommendations for policy-makers and institutions, civil society and individual citizens—and I'll be sure to table that report with you—although I caution this group, your committee, against expecting too much on behalf of citizens to equip them. They need to be equipped with media and digital literacy skills, but the power of these platforms and their ubiquity really require a policy response.
We at The Dais join dozens of other civil society and research organizations to urge timely passage of Bill C-63, the online harms act. Although misinfo and disinfo isn't an explicitly prescribed harm under the act, misinfo and disinfo helps fuel the harms that are identified in the act, and so we urge timely passage of that.
Third, I will address misinfo and disinfo, not foreign influence, as it relates to the Canadian media ecosystem generally. How Canadians consume media makes them more vulnerable to some of the...and those consumption trends make them more vulnerable to some of the phenomena that you are studying. We know that more Canadians are getting their news online, specifically from social media, and that fewer are participating in a shared space and consuming information produced by organizations that have strong or identifiable journalistic standards or standards of review, evidence, and context, to begin with. We also know that the effects of recent corporate decisions and policies can make the media ecosystem weaker. For instance, 25% of Canadians get news from Meta/Facebook—which is a source of news according to the Reuters digital study—and 29% get it from YouTube. Well, the recent decision by Meta news to throttle...on Facebook and Instagram, means that, in our study, 41% of respondents say that it has had a negative effect on their ability to stay current with the news.
Thank you for this opportunity to speak to you, and I look forward to your questions.