Hi there. I'm Matt Hatfield, and I'm the executive director of OpenMedia, a grassroots community of 230,000 people in Canada who work together for an open, accessible and surveillance-free Internet. I'm joining you from the unceded territory of the Sto:lo, Tsleil-Waututh, Squamish and Musqueam nations.
I’d like to ask us all a question: What does cybersecurity mean to you as an individual, as a family member and as a citizen? For me, and for many people across Canada, our cybersecurity is inseparable from our privacy, as so much of our everyday lives is conducted online—much more so since COVID—and none of us feel secure with the thought of being spied on in our everyday lives, whether by hackers, hostile states or our own government. For most Canadians, our cybersecurity is very much about that sense of personal security.
The draft of Bill C-26 you have in front of you threatens that security. It poses enormous risks to our personal privacy, without basic accountability and oversight to ensure that the people given these powers don't abuse them against us. You must fix this.
Exhibit A is proposed section 15.2 of the Telecommunications Act, which grants the government the power to order telcos “to do anything or refrain from doing anything”. There are no limits here, no tests for necessity, proportionality and reasonableness, and no requirement for consultation. The government could use these powers to order telcos to break the encryption we need to keep ourselves safe from hackers, fraudsters and thieves. They could even use these powers to disconnect ordinary people indefinitely from the Internet, maybe because our smart toaster or an old phone we gave our kids gets hijacked by a hostile botnet. Without a requirement that these orders be proportional or time-limited, these are real risks.
It gets worse. The government would be allowed to keep even the existence of these orders—never mind their content—top secret indefinitely, and even if these orders are challenged by judicial review, the minister could bring secret evidence before secret hearings, which flies in the face of basic judicial transparency.
There's no excuse for this. Our close allies in Australia and the U.K. have shown how cybersecurity can be strengthened without compromising fundamental rights. Why do Canadians deserve lesser protections?
All this comes when Parliament is working on strengthening our privacy laws through Bill C-27. I have to ask, does one hand of our government even know what the other is working on?
We recognize that there are very real problems, though, that Bill C-26 is trying to solve. When we read the government's stated objectives, we're on board. Should we protect the digital infrastructure? Sure. Should we remove risky equipment from hostile states? Of course. Should we force big banks and telcos to better protect their customers? Of course. However, we can fulfill these objectives without sacrificing our rights or balanced, effective governance. Let's talk about how.
First, the government's new powers must be constrained. Robust necessity, proportionality and reasonableness tests are an absolute must. An unbreakable encryption is the fundamental baseline that all of our personal privacy depends on, so there must be an absolute prohibition on the government using these powers to break encryption.
Second, privacy rights must be entrenched. Personal information must be clearly defined as confidential and forbidden from being shared with foreign states, which are not subject to Bill C-26's checks and balances.
Third, the government must not be allowed to conceal the use of its new powers under a permanent veil of secrecy.
Fourth, when the use of those powers is challenged in court, there must be no secret evidence. Special advocates should be appointed to ensure all evidence is duly tested.
Fifth, any information the Canadian Security Establishment obtains about Canadians under Bill C-26 should be used exclusively for the defensive cybersecurity part of their mandate. I hope you all remember that NSIRA, the body explicitly established by Parliament to oversee CSE, has complained for years about CSE not being accountable to them. Knowing how difficult it's proved to keep them accountable for their existing powers, please don't grant them broad new powers without tight and clear use and reporting mechanisms.
As other people have said, when cybersecurity works, it's a team sport. It requires buy-in from all of us. We all have to be on team Canada, and we all have to trust in the regulatory framework that governs it. There's zero chance of that happening with Bill C-26 as is. Adequate transparency, proportionality and independent verification are the necessary baseline that this bill has to earn for it to work.
We're going to be delivering a petition signed by nearly 10,000 Canadians to you shortly, folks who are calling for that baseline protection. We urge you to listen to these voters and adopt the amendments package that civil society has suggested to you to get this legislation where it needs to be.
Thanks. I look forward to your questions.