Evidence of meeting #75 for Industry, Science and Technology in the 42nd Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was casl.

A recording is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Scott Smith  Director, Intellectual Property and Innovation Policy, Canadian Chamber of Commerce
Aïsha Fournier Diallo  Senior Legal Counsel, Desjardins Group
John Lawford  Executive Director and General Counsel, Public Interest Advocacy Centre
Alysia Lau  External Counsel, Regulatory and Public Policy, Public Interest Advocacy Centre
Barry Sookman  Partner, McCarthy Tétrault, As an Individual
Natalie Brown  Director, Desjardins Group

12:50 p.m.

Director, Desjardins Group

Natalie Brown

Under the current regulation, that can still be sent because technically the bank has your implied consent. So those emails you're talking about are permitted today.

12:50 p.m.

NDP

Brian Masse NDP Windsor West, ON

But there's control in that. If somebody does it right now and it causes me a virus, I can go to the CRTC and demand recourse, and now we've had a stay as part of the legislation to protect you on that.

12:50 p.m.

Director, Desjardins Group

Natalie Brown

I think the objectives of the law are exactly those that you mentioned, and with good clear definitions, that could still be attained.

12:50 p.m.

NDP

Brian Masse NDP Windsor West, ON

Thank you.

I'll let people carry on.

12:50 p.m.

Director, Intellectual Property and Innovation Policy, Canadian Chamber of Commerce

Scott Smith

I think we need to be careful about conflating different types of messages. I don't think any of us would argue that it is important to manage emails that come through with malicious intent. So if there are ransomware attachments, if it's being sent through a botnet and it's attacking your system, it makes sense to have some legislation in place that allows enforcement agencies to deal with that. I think what we're talking about is messages that customers want. From a business-to-business perspective, there needs to be a certain amount of freedom to be able to conduct that business, to be able to prospect. If specific bulk emails are going to advertise a broad cross-section of people who may or may not have an interest, that's a different story.

12:50 p.m.

NDP

Brian Masse NDP Windsor West, ON

Mr. Sookman.

12:50 p.m.

Partner, McCarthy Tétrault, As an Individual

Barry Sookman

You asked a good question. First,, the fact that the CRTC is there and prosecutes and publicizes prosecution does have some impact on behaviour. Contrary to what my friend said, I think some of their fines have been very high relative to the alleged infraction. Specifically on your question about the PRA, which is a good one, I don't have a problem with a private right of action in a calibrated piece of legislation. If the private right of action was effective against the people who were providing the malware, the spyware, the phishing problems—the real bad actors everyone agrees on, assuming you can find them and go after them—I have no objection to that. Nor do I have an objection to letting ISPs, which are bearing the brunt of dealing with this, have a right of action against the people who are the purveyors of the 99%. The problem I have is that when you have a piece of legislation that's extremely onerous, that's ambiguous, and we have the potential for class actions, we're creating a monster that is going to be very expensive for Canadians to address.

I applaud the government to have suspended the PRA while this committee does the work it needs to do. If, at the end of the day, the recommendation is to recalibrate the loss but it targets the things that it truly was intended to target and it has a PRA, so be it. Throw the book at these bad guys. I don't think anyone around the table disagrees with that.

12:55 p.m.

Executive Director and General Counsel, Public Interest Advocacy Centre

John Lawford

I think we agree with you that consumers should have control, and that's what you're talking about. I own the device and I pay for the connectivity. That's the way the act is set up now. If it turns to opt out, consumers lose control. What you're going to get, if you lose control, is unsolicited commercial email. There's not only bad spam and malware, if you want to talk about illegal. There is also unwanted, unsolicited, commercial email, and the act covers that as well. That's an element of control that chafes against the thought that businesses should be able to contact people out of the blue. We support the control of consumers in that.

As for the private rate of action, it would have been a complementary aspect because, as I said in our remarks, a recalcitrant or aggressive spammer, somebody who's been told to stop over and over again, clearly fined in the past and continues to do so, or who is a hard-core spammer, needs to have the threat of millions of dollars outside of the administrative regime because some of those just can't be handled by the administrative regime. We've seen people set up shop in Canada who are very hard core.

I'll just end there.

12:55 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Dan Ruimy

Thank you very much.

We have about two minutes left.

Ms. Ng.

12:55 p.m.

Liberal

Mary Ng Liberal Markham—Thornhill, ON

I'll make this really quick.

I think it was never the intention of the legislation to not enable good business practices. I think it was never the intent to not encourage start-ups to be able to start and be successful or to be so cumbersome to small businesses that it impairs the ability to operate. I certainly think that the intent of the legislation was to deal with a real issue at hand, and indeed, it needs to continue protecting consumers and achieve that balance.

We have work to do as a committee. What would be enormously helpful is if the witnesses across the table would be able to, with that view in mind, send submissions to us because we're not going to have time to do this verbally. Maybe you can provide submissions about the solutions in addition to what you've already said, because obviously we have that. There may be practical solutions that we should be looking at that we can be focused on so we don't throw the baby out with the bathwater but really do something here as a committee to address the very bad and have the tools to do that. We could manage the way that we protect consumers without having a chilling effect on overall competitiveness, because that's not what we want.

I think that where you could be the most helpful to us—and we're going to ask this of everyone—is to give us those ideas. I think government and this committee would welcome that.

12:55 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Dan Ruimy

Thank you very much.

That was a really great session. There are lots of things for us to consider. I'm glad that we had the two opposing views here today. It really opens it up for where we need to go.

I'd like to thank everybody for their comments and their presentations. It will be an interesting study.

This meeting is adjourned.