Thank you, Chair.
I want to differentiate because I think there have been attempts to conflate so many attacks with the incident that happened in this particular case. We're dealing with phishing here. This is a different thing altogether. This is not a denial-of-service attack. This is not a cyber-attack. A phishing attack is a personal attack, because the vulnerability is at the human level.
I'm fully convinced that our technical experts.... I actually did IT work in a previous life. I'm so outdated now that I wouldn't know some of the new things they're doing.
The difference here is that it involves a human being making an error. That's how they do it. We can actually thwart most of the cyber-stuff. We can thwart denial-of-service attacks. We can thwart all of these things that attack the technology. However, this is an attack whereby the vulnerability is one of us clicking on something that we ought not be clicking on.
The difference in this particular case is that it was serious enough.... It was not just somebody looking to try to scam us out of some money. It's not the Nigerian prince type of question. This was serious enough because it was from a hostile foreign state actor, or considered to be a potentially hostile foreign state actor, directly targeting a group of us—18 of our colleagues—with this attack.
The frustrating part for me is that our job and our primary responsibility.... We're not in the sausage grinding of government. We're actually very nimble people. We're much more nimble than Monday to Friday, nine to five. If we're going to be able to do our jobs, we need to know what's going on. If we're not informed....
I think it's absolutely embarrassing for a country that 18 parliamentarians basically found out because the FBI released this. It is different from a cyber-attack. It's different from all the other random stuff that our emails might get hit with. This is hostile activity meant to do something subversive or damaging to individual members of Parliament and, thereby, the entire institution and our democracy at the root level.
If we're not told about something this specific.... The FBI thought it was important enough. It seems to be able to sort out cyber-attacks, denial-of-service attacks, other infrastructure attacks and other random phishing or malware attacks. Why can't Canada do this?
How are we supposed to hold our government to account if we don't even know that something is happening?
I'm looking to you three to say something that would give this committee some direction about this. What do you think would have been, to the best of your knowledge, a more appropriate way for you to find out? What would have been a more appropriate timeline for you to find out in?
The only reason we're talking about this is because somebody else tipped us off.