Refine by MP, party, committee, province, or result type.

Results 1-15 of 44
Sort by relevance | Sorted by date: newest first / oldest first

Procedure and House Affairs committee  The suggestion of having a guarantee of transparency and independence by creating a body like that is a good one. It will have to be determined whether it needs to be completely independent and separate from Elections Canada. We should not be multiplying the number of voices tha

April 25th, 2023Committee meeting

Steve Waterhouse

Procedure and House Affairs committee  The agencies that handle how elections are managed are independent. They have access to a lot of information, which they are able to obtain from the technical authority in place, or from intelligence agencies. However, they disseminate very little information, overall. So it is v

April 25th, 2023Committee meeting

Steve Waterhouse

Procedure and House Affairs committee  There is no way, because it can also be an agent operating from their country of birth, but who pretends that they are in Canada or the United States. This could make it very difficult to geoblock the source of the information if it is in an allied country but the message is fake

April 25th, 2023Committee meeting

Steve Waterhouse

Procedure and House Affairs committee  To verify that the use of cloud computing complies with Government of Canada standards, regardless of the company hired, Elections Canada had to do a threat and risk assessment, with the assistance of the Communications Security Establishment, which is Canada's technical authorit

April 25th, 2023Committee meeting

Steve Waterhouse

Procedure and House Affairs committee  The risk is higher, yes. Remember the good old days when people received voters' lists in their mailbox. Not much could be done to control what they did with that information, at the time. Today, a lot of crime, even fraud, can be committed with that information, which is easier

April 25th, 2023Committee meeting

Steve Waterhouse

Procedure and House Affairs committee  The foreign states that certain applications come from and that own them can use them in several ways as vectors of influence, particularly by using messages for their own benefit that they send to all kinds of people, going as far as to target very specific diasporas. For exampl

April 25th, 2023Committee meeting

Steve Waterhouse

Procedure and House Affairs committee  Thank you for the question, and I would say that the threat has been amplified. I refer to the strategies taken from a book published in China in 1999 whose English title is Unrestricted Warfare. That book emphasized how China should position itself, given that it was less well

April 25th, 2023Committee meeting

Steve Waterhouse

Procedure and House Affairs committee  The use of artificial intelligence is certainly going to have a multiplier effect, but at this stage, the technology is in the embryonic stage. The use of that technology will raise the danger of fake messages being generated, but with such verbal and visual authenticity that it

April 25th, 2023Committee meeting

Steve Waterhouse

Procedure and House Affairs committee  It's a great question the member put. I have to put in, as Ms. Grondin-Robillard said, that, yes, it is a team effort. The message has to be formatted at the top and then pushed down through the educational system. I'm one who believes firmly—education is a provincial responsibi

April 25th, 2023Committee meeting

Steve Waterhouse

Procedure and House Affairs committee  In the population in general, I would say that people tend to use technology intuitively. There is no formal teaching about how the new model of iPod or Android phone works, for example. People learn by using them intuitively, or by osmosis, with contacts. We might think that ne

April 25th, 2023Committee meeting

Steve Waterhouse

Procedure and House Affairs committee  In light of managing the information that goes to the public, yes, it's very hard to pinpoint the origin of the sources, as obfuscation is omnipresent whatever information is produced from anywhere in the world. It could be from here inside Canada, as well as from other countries

April 25th, 2023Committee meeting

Steve Waterhouse

Procedure and House Affairs committee  Thank you, Madam Chair. My name is Steve Waterhouse and I am a lecturer in the master's level microprogram in information security, prevention component, at the UniversitĂ© de Sherbrooke. I am a former information security officer at the Department of National Defence. I am also

April 25th, 2023Committee meeting

Steve Waterhouse

Procedure and House Affairs committee  Okay. Do I need to start over?

April 25th, 2023Committee meeting

Steve Waterhouse

Procedure and House Affairs committee  Okay. So I was defining cognitive warfare. It is the way to use knowledge in order to create conflict. In its broadest sense, cognitive warfare is not limited to the military or institutional worlds. With the use of this tactic of warfare, the various threat actors in cyberspace

April 25th, 2023Committee meeting

Steve Waterhouse

Canada-China Relations committee  First, you must acknowledge that this issue affects all departments and all areas of society and that there must be an active, not passive, education program. Right now, the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security is providing some great information. The information is available on a

April 19th, 2021Committee meeting

Steve Waterhouse