Good afternoon. My name is Randall Baran-Chong, co-founder of Canadian SIM-swap victims united.
I'd like to thank the committee for inviting me to reappear because, the last time I was here, the lockdown was announced that afternoon, so I hope not to be the harbinger of another pandemic.
To refresh your memories, number portability, which was introduced in 2007, was designed to enable customers to switch carriers easily while retaining their phone number, but it's something that has been exploited by fraudsters to transfer ownership of a phone number to themselves, often by manipulating the customer service representative of a telco.
Once in possession of your phone number, they take advantage of SMS and text-based authentication methods and click “forgot my password” to take access and control of the victim's accounts. If you think about it, that can be everything from your email to banking to cloud storage to crypto-wallets. Within our organization of over 20 victim advocates, we have people who have lost possession of all their data, had hundreds of thousands of dollars stolen, and, in my case, had a livelihood threatened with extortion.
What has happened since that last fortuitous meeting? As part of its November 2020 report, this committee—with a few different faces now—had two key recommendations, which I am paraphrasing. One was that a hearing be held and, in the absence of that, legislation.
The minister responded by saying that we entrust the CRTC and the wireless network portability council, which is composed of the telcos themselves, to handle it and do its job of self-enforcement, and that legislation is unnecessary, as unauthorized porting is covered as a crime.
I can speak for almost all victims in our group that our issue is not with criminal enforcement of this issue or with the perpetrators themselves; it's a real matter of distrust of the telcos and their regulator. To do something probably never done in this chamber before, I'm going to quote rapper Ice-T. Our attitude is more, “Don't hate the player, hate the game”.
What I mean by that is we know that criminals will always look for vulnerabilities to exploit, but it's the system, the telcos, that we entrust to protect our personal information that do the math of what it costs to prevent these frauds versus the near-zero cost of punishment they bear in the event of failure, and the regulator that exists to protect the public has failed us. In fact, both of them have been thus far dismissive, unsympathetic and ignorant of victims.
Since our last meeting, the following has been revealed: It's more prevalent than most people thought.
Ms. Gray alluded to this. An access to information request filed by a Globe Telecom reporter—who ended up being a victim of SIM-swap fraud, ironically—revealed 24,627 cases, to be exact, of unauthorized ports over the 10-month period of August 2019 to May 2020. That represented 1% of all ports.
Compare that to credit card fraud, where only 0.17% of transactions are fraudulent. At a peak, 2.5% of all ports were fraudulent. Its magnitude can be massive. Two Canadians, one in Montreal and one in Hamilton, have been charged with stealing between $40 million and $50 million in cryptocurrency and other credit card fraud in Canada and the United States.
Meanwhile, other victims in our groups are attempting to recoup millions in stolen funds due to telco customer service representatives surrendering personal information to fraudsters, enabling execution of the unauthorized port.
Finally, telcos have self-enforced in the meantime, and unsuccessfully in the beginning. After a number of failed attempts to address the problem, they introduced text notifications around the summer of 2020. This continues to fail. We know this because of victims who emerged afterward. There is a group of 14 that we are aware of who were attempting to recoup several million dollars back in 2021. Telcos have failed to prevent the exploitation of their representatives and they apply the practice inconsistently.
The fact remains this: Our digital identities and our phone numbers are only growing in criticality. Your SIM is the new SIN number—that is, until SMS-based two-factor authentication is replaced wholesale.
The second point is that the safety of our digital identity is as strong as the weakest link and, in this case, telco customer service representatives, CSRs, are the weakest link in the line of defence of our phone numbers.
Investigations have revealed phone conversations and chat logs of CSRs being socially engineered into providing information to fraudsters. This speaks to a lack of training, misaligned incentives to prioritize customer throughput over customer protection and a lack of punitive measures for the telcos themselves in the event of failure.
Finally, it remains that progress and practices around unauthorized porting remain opaque. The fact that we were unable to produce numbers and that they can only be produced through access to information requests speaks to that. There is no proactive disclosure of data on incidences or effectiveness of practices.
We need to have a hearing to get a more thorough understanding of the situation and response situation and allow for victims to be heard. Second, we need to codify rules that create consistency and durability in practices, including transparency in metrics. Third, we need to introduce enforcement for non-compliance, as I suggested back in 2020 when Australia introduced fines of up to 250,000 Australian dollars for non-compliance.
These three recommendations are all supported by over 12,500 Canadians who signed an OpenMedia petition to that effect.
Let's not wait another pandemic for things to happen on this. I welcome your questions, and a way to a cure.
Thank you.