Thank you, Mr. Lafrenière.
Thank you, Mr. Chair. Good afternoon, committee members.
I'm not sure if this little diagram has been distributed to everybody. You may have it in front of you. I hope it will be able to guide the discussion, because with me talking in the abstract, it is a bit easier to understand the concept once you have the diagram in front of you.
I'd like to explain the concept of open banking and the cyber risks it poses to the Canadian financial services sector. I'm sure that many members are not aware of what open banking is all about.
It's a concept where a consumer can request that all their data held by their bank—their chequing account, credit card transactions, debit card transactions, investments, RRSPs, mortgage, insurance or any other loan—be transferred to third parties who are in financial services. By third parties, we mean financial technology firms, also known as fintechs.
These fintechs will then be able to underwrite you a financial service product that you may or may not already have, based on the banking data your bank has about you. This transfer would happen via a middleman called an API, which stands for application program interface.
APIs are pretty much platforms or apps that would act as a conduit among the customer, the bank data and all the fintech entities they're associated with. Once a customer submits a request of this API to authorize the API to gather and disseminate their data from their bank, the API would follow through and disseminate the data to fintechs that are affiliated with the API.
The fintechs would have your banking history and, using this data, underwrite you a product to outbid something you already have or something you do not have. Based on the data, they would pretty much know everything about you: what products you have, what products you don't have and what products you might need.
This is the essence of the concept of open banking. As you can imagine, the risks and threats surrounding open banking are many: Who regulates the APls and by what privacy standards, provincial standards or federal standards? Who regulates the fintechs? Which privacy rules do they follow? How does a consumer authorize these players to disseminate their banking data? Once a consumer has given consent, can they revoke it? What happens to the data once a consumer has withdrawn their consent? How does a consumer know which players are holding their data?
Some of the bigger questions on cyber risks and hacking also apply: How easily can a fintech get hacked? What rules do they follow, and who enforces these rules?
Banks are highly regulated players with tremendous privacy standards in place in Canada, as are insurance companies. Where do fintechs fall into that hierarchy of standards? Canada's banks spend millions, if not billions, on technology to protect their customers' data, and even they get hacked. How about these fintech firms, which spend very little? These are a few of the big-picture issues that I will leave for this committee's consideration.
With respect to the insurance sector, as Mr. Lafrenière mentioned, with threats of cyber risks, we can say that, when it comes to mutual insurance companies, we believe there is minimal risk. lnsurance companies do not hold valuable financial data and, as such, are not as exposed to hacking as banks, for example, which hold much more valuable data.
I will leave you with an example. Of course, an insurance company insuring your home or car could be hacked; however, I am not sure a hacker would find it worth his while to know how old your car is or how many washrooms you have in your basement. Of course the risk of hacking exists; however, it is a question of degree.
With that, we're pleased to take any questions you may have.