There are many challenges from a legislative perspective in dealing with identity theft. One of the biggest ones is that, as you mentioned, people already have a preconceived notion of what identity theft means. The various industries that have been involved in the process of developing the legislation also have their own ideas.
The credit card companies tend to like to think of credit card fraud as something different from identity theft. There are existing offences in the Criminal Code that deal with credit card fraud and debit card fraud. This legislation will overlap with that legislation, but there will continue to be specific credit and debit card offences. It's my understanding that credit card fraud and debit card fraud make up the overwhelming majority of identity theft offences.
What would follow after that would be the creation of accounts and account takeovers. That could be a cellphone account, or even something like a cable television account or utilities account, and involve taking over someone's financial account or creating new accounts for utilities in another person's name so that the bills go to them but you're the one receiving the benefit. Those make up the largest percentage of identity theft types of issues.
There's a much smaller segment of offences, which Mr. Comartin adverted to, dealing with title fraud, real estate fraud, mortgage fraud. It represents a much smaller segment of the total of identity frauds, but obviously in cases like that the damage can be much more extreme.
So it runs the gamut. Unfortunately, I don't have with me the breakdown in statistics, but certainly credit card and debit card fraud do account for the overwhelming majority of what identity theft is. These offences will give the police additional offences that they can charge in relation to those crimes. Those crimes are adequately covered now. They would be the only offences for which possession of the information, even before it's been used, is currently criminalized. This will add to that and give the police additional charges that they can lay.
What's on the horizon? I don't know. What I can tell you, though, from the experiences and encounters I've had with people from other countries in discussing this issue, in particular in Asia, is that one of the most dominant forms of identity fraud in Asia is actually with respect to video game accounts. The video game industry there is much more massive than it is here. A larger percentage of the population plays these games. They input all kinds of money into their online accounts for certain video games. If people can obtain their identities, they can log onto their accounts and spend down all of the money they have in there.
I don't know whether that will become a major phenomenon in Canada, but in other parts of the world you can start to see--depending on the culture and society, and on what sorts of activities people participate in--that there is scope for identity theft, regardless of what those are.
So anyone could guess as to what will be coming down the line.