:
Good afternoon, everyone.
I call this meeting to order.
[Translation]
Welcome to meeting number 132 of the Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(3)(h) and the motion adopted by the committee on Tuesday, February 13, 2024, the committee is resuming its study on the impact of disinformation and of misinformation on the work of parliamentarians.
[English]
I would like to welcome our witnesses for the first hour today.
From the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, we have Richard Baylin, director general, cybercrime, and chief superintendent, federal policing, criminal operations.
Welcome.
[Translation]
We are also hearing from Denis Beaudoin, director general of national security and chief superintendent of federal policing.
Welcome to the committee, Mr. Beaudoin.
[English]
We also have Greg O'Hayon, director general, federal policing security intelligence and international policing.
I want to welcome you, sir.
You have up to five minutes for an opening statement to address to the committee.
[Translation]
Mr. Beaudoin, you have the floor for five minutes.
My name is Denis Beaudoin, and I am a chief superintendent and the director general responsible for foreign actor interference for the federal policing national security program at the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, RCMP. I am joined today by Richard Baylin, chief superintendent of federal policing criminal operations on cybercrime, and Greg O'Hayon, director general of federal policing security intelligence.
First, I would like to thank you for the opportunity to discuss this issue. The malicious intrusion into Canada’s democratic processes by hostile foreign actors is one of the RCMP's highest priorities.
To be clear, foreign interference affects every aspect of society. This includes the very foundations of our democracy, the fundamental rights and values that define us as a society, our economic prosperity, the critical infrastructure essential to our well-being, and our sovereignty.
Foreign actors seek to advance their objectives through several tactics, including state-backed harassment and intimidation of communities in Canada, manipulating the discourse at every level of our political system, and using malicious and deceptive tactics to influence our democracy.
Make no mistake—foreign governments are conducting campaigns of online disinformation to undermine our democratic processes and institutions, as well as to erode citizens’ faith in democracy.
The RCMP has a broad mandate related to national security and cybercrime to ensure public safety by investigating, disrupting and preventing foreign interference. It draws upon provisions from various pieces of legislation, including those recently enacted in Bill , as well as other offences under the Criminal Code. When investigating disinformation campaigns, the RCMP works closely with domestic and international partners to identify relevant evidence but sometimes disinformation campaigns may not constitute criminal conduct.
With these considerations in mind, I will briefly summarize the RCMP’s role in contributing to the protection of Canada, its citizens, residents and elected officials from foreign interference activities.
[English]
In 2019, the Government of Canada announced its plan to protect democracy, to defend Canadian democratic institutions. This included measures to strengthen elections against various threats, including cyber threats and foreign interference. From the outset, the RCMP has been a committed contributor to these whole-of-government efforts.
Elected and public officials are central figures in our democracy's political system, as they shape our policies and laws. This role makes them key targets for foreign states, which may try to influence or coerce them to take policy positions that align with their interests. As such, the RCMP recently briefed parliamentarians, in partnership with other government agencies, on the threat of foreign interference. The RCMP is also leading initiatives to raise awareness with police forces across the country on the new legislation included in Bill , as well as on the threat of foreign interference.
The RCMP is also an active member of the security and intelligence threats to elections task force—otherwise known as SITE—a working group that coordinates collection and analysis efforts concerning threats to Canada's federal election processes. This group is Canada's principal mechanism for monitoring threats of hostile state interference during elections and also consists of experts from CSIS, the CSE and Global Affairs Canada.
The RCMP's federal policing of cybercrime focuses investigative efforts on the highest level of cybercriminality and works closely with domestic and international partners to identify, disrupt and prosecute the most serious threats within the cybercrime ecosystem, which cause significant economic or other impacts to Canadian interests at home and abroad. The RCMP's federal policing cybercrime investigative teams and cyber liaison officers abroad focus on the prevention, enforcement and disruption of high-value threat actors and prolific cybercrime enablers who facilitate sophisticated crimes, such as malware, ransomware, espionage and foreign interference, as well as attacks against government institutions, key business assets and critical infrastructure of national importance.
As members of this committee are well aware, there has been an increase in threats to public officials in recent years. Because we recognize the personal impact of this trend, as well as the harm it causes to our democracy, this issue remains a key priority for the RCMP, and we will continue to counter these threats through our federal policing responsibilities, as well as through our engagement with other police forces and the diaspora communities.
With threats of this magnitude, collaboration between the public, the police of jurisdiction and the Government of Canada partners will continue to be an important aspect of protecting Canada against foreign interference.
The protection of Canada's democratic processes and the safety of its citizens and residents is paramount for the RCMP. It will be important for all aspects of society to work together to protect against foreign interference in this space.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Mr. Beaudoin.
I do want to thank the RCMP. Earlier this year, we, as a committee, had the opportunity to visit the academy in Ottawa, and through Deputy Commissioner Larkin, we got a pretty comprehensive briefing on the tools that are used for data extraction, for monitoring cybercrimes, etc., and foreign interference.
Were any of you at that session? No? Okay. Mr. Fisher was; I see his hand in the back.
We are going to start with our first round of questioning. It's six minutes on all sides; every party has six minutes. We are going to start with Mr. Barrett.
Go ahead, please, Mr. Barrett.
:
Mr. Chair, on April 10 of this year, The Globe and Mail reported that in 2019 the then Liberal candidate and now the for Don Valley North was tipped off by a Liberal Party member that he was being monitored by CSIS.
It was confirmed at the public inquiry on foreign interference that only a select few top Liberals, closely connected to the , were present at a classified CSIS briefing where this information was communicated. Three top Liberals received the briefing, including Azam Ishmael, the national director of the Liberal Party. Mr. Ishmael then briefed Jeremy Broadhurst, who did have the requisite security clearance, Broadhurst being a top adviser to the . Broadhurst then briefed the Prime Minister.
What we know is that five top Liberals, including the himself, were briefed. That information resulted in a leak in which a candidate, now a , was tipped off that he was being monitored by CSIS.
Can you confirm that knowingly leaking classified information is an offence under sections 13 and 14 of the Security of Information Act?
:
Thank you for the question, Mr. Chair.
What I would say to that is that we've learned from that report that the evolution of cybercrime has required us to focus our efforts at a higher level. I mentioned the word "ecosystem" earlier. We are evolving our techniques. We are evolving tools.
I did also say that I'm always interested in having a conversation about resourcing and how we can better approach and deal with the aspects of cybercriminality. But I also said earlier as well, you will remember, that the Auditor General report did go back a number of years. When we talk about our initial approach to cybercrime and cyber-enabled crime, frauds and so on and so forth, and where we've now evolved to, that work still needs to continue, but moving away from an incident response-type aspect of cybercrime and working at a level of criminality that is about dismantling a system that enables cybercrime.
We're refocusing a lot of our efforts in that respect to make sure we can adequately deal with the issue.
Thank you to the witnesses for being with us today.
In my riding of Châteauguay—Lacolle, which will soon be called Châteauguay—Les Jardins‑de‑Napierville, social media platforms, particularly Facebook and other groups, are very popular. Everyone uses them.
Our study is about misinformation and disinformation. The definition of those two terms can lead to confusion.
Mr. Beaudoin, in your own words, can you tell us what those two terms mean?
:
You did a good job of answering the question for me. Everything you said is true.
I can give you some examples. We went to Montreal in May or June to educate communities in the city.
We also give talks to police services across the country to educate them on foreign interference.
Foreign governments sometimes hire private security firms, so we've given many presentations to such firms. We encourage them to be watchful and help them to recognize the signs of interference, including through the use of social media.
We try to target a large audience. Of course, we don't have the resources to do everything we'd like to at the community level. We try to target certain groups to maximize the impact. We give in-person talks in some communities.
Right now, with the RCMP, we're working with Public Safety Canada and other agencies to deliver seven or eight presentations for specific communities in large Canadian cities. We try to go wherever we can to reach as many Canadians as possible.
:
I appreciate all of your being here today and providing us with some valuable information.
There was a request by Mr. Green, so I'm going to make sure that the clerk follows up with parliamentary affairs. Generally, I try to put a timeline on the responses, so if you can, please supply those to the committee a week from today, perhaps at 5 p.m. I understand it's Thanksgiving weekend, but there should be ample time to address Mr. Green's questions.
Thank you, gentlemen, for being here today.
I'm going to suspend for a couple of minutes as we get ready for the next panel.
The meeting is suspended.
:
Thank you for your patience as we switched over to the second panel.
I'd like to welcome our witnesses for the second hour today.
As an individual, we have Heidi Tworek, professor of history and public policy, University of British Columbia. Welcome, Ms. Tworek.
From CIVIX—which I'm familiar with from some local programs in Barrie, as I'm sure other members of Parliament are—we have Kenneth Boyd, the director of education.
In person from the Russian Canadian Democratic Alliance, we have Maria Kartasheva, the director, and Guillaume Sirois, who is counsel.
We're going to start with you, Professor Tworek. You have up to five minutes to address the committee with an opening statement.
Go ahead, please. Thank you.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and the committee, for inviting me to discuss this important topic.
I'm a professor of history and public policy at the University of British Columbia, where I direct the Centre for the Study of Democratic Institutions, or CSDI. At CSDI, we aim to understand the past, analyze the present and train for the future, so I'll make three points today—one about the past, one about the present and one about the future.
First is the past. Misinformation and disinformation are a feature, not a bug, of the international system. So, too, is foreign interference in elections. The U.S. feared French interference all the way back in 1796. In the second half of the 20th century, the two Cold War superpowers, the U.S. and Soviet Union, intervened in around 11% of all national executive elections around the world.
The question is not if foreign interference will happen, but rather why some states engage in this practice at particular moments.
Some of my research examined why Germans tried to use the then-new technology of radio to influence global politics from 1900 to 1945. Germans wanted to interfere in foreign information environments because they felt boxed in politically and economically. Losing World War I accelerated those feelings. This obviously did not end well. The Nazis built on decades of experimentation to spread racist and anti-Semitic content, ending in a world war of words as well as weapons.
Without getting into more historical weeds, this shows that analyzing international relations actually helps to predict potential foreign disinformation campaigns. This phenomenon will not disappear, but will wax and wane, so we need systemic interventions to embed resilience through educational initiatives, platform interventions, transparency, research and other measures to strengthen democracy.
Second is the present. The current social media and AI environment has created new economic incentives for misinformation and disinformation. For understandable reasons, these committee meetings are focused on politics, but making money fuels the problem, too.
We need stronger enforcement of electoral regulations on platforms to guard against this during elections. Canada might also coordinate with other democracies facing the same problem. For example, an intergovernmental task force could coordinate on issues like demonetizing disinformation. This could draw lessons from other multilateral institutions like the Financial Action Task Force, or FATF.
More broadly, Canada has much to learn from other jurisdictions, like Finland on media literacy or Taiwan on transparency and combatting disinformation while preserving freedom of expression.
Third is the future. generative AI or gen AI is obviously at the top of most people's minds. I recently co-authored a report released by CSDI on the role of gen AI in elections around the world in 2024. We found that gen AI is currently pervasive, but not necessarily persuasive, yet it still creates problems. We find that gen AI threatens democratic processes like elections in three main ways.
First, it enables deception by lowering the barrier to entry to create problematic content. This accelerates problems that already existed on social media platforms.
Second, gen AI pollutes the information environment by worsening the quality of available information online.
Third, gen AI intensifies harassment. It's far easier to create deepfakes that may be used to harass female political candidates in particular. We should worry about this amplification of online abuse and harassment of political candidates, which is something that I've studied in Canada since 2019. This could target specific individuals or under-represented groups to force them out of politics.
To date, there is little evidence that beneficial use of gen AI in elections will outweigh these harmful ones. Multiple measures are needed to address the challenges of gen AI. Although not election-specific, for example, the British Columbia Intimate Images Protection Act offers one avenue to protect female political candidates from deepfakes. We should look for similar legislation to address other challenges posed by gen AI.
To sum up, the past tells us that disinformation is not going anywhere, but we do have power to mitigate it. The present tells us to grapple with the economic incentives, too. The future warns us to address issues with gen AI, like deepfakes, before they get out of hand.
Thank you very much.
:
Good afternoon, members of the committee.
My name is Kenneth Boyd. I'm the director of education at CIVIX, a national non-partisan charity that is dedicated to building the skills and habits of active and informed citizenship. We work primarily with K-to-12 teachers from every province and territory in providing free programs both in English and in French on the themes of democratic engagement, civic discourse and digital media literacy.
Members of the committee may be most familiar with our student vote program, which is our parallel election program for students under the voting age, as well as our rep day program, which invites MPs and other elected officials into classrooms to engage directly with students.
We approach digital media literacy as a necessary component of informed citizenship. Engaging in the democratic process requires that citizens be able to identify reliable and trustworthy sources of information and have the skills to determine the difference between fact and fiction.
We know that the effects of mis- and disinformation online can interfere with engaged citizenship in ways that go beyond being merely misled. For example, in a recent survey that we conducted with 800 teachers from across Canada, we found that 81% of respondents said they believe that mis- and disinformation on social media contribute a “great extent” to the spread of hateful rhetoric in their schools.
Lacking the ability to engage critically with content online thus has downstream consequences in terms of people's ability to have constructive and meaningful conversations about important issues.
To address these problems, we created CTRL‑F, our digital media literacy program that teaches empirically supported verification skills that have been proven to increase people's ability to determine the veracity of claims and identify the motives of unfamiliar sources online.
Since 2019, CTRL‑F has been used by over 5,200 teachers who have taught the program to more than 300,000 students from all across Canada. We are consistently updating our program to address new kinds of mis- and disinformation online, including those produced by artificial intelligence, and are currently adapting our resources for use by adult learners.
While digital media literacy skills are necessary for everyone, it is especially important that students learn these skills at a young age. There are, however, a number of challenges in teaching effective digital media literacy to Canadians. I will note that while we recognize that education is a provincial issue, it is worth highlighting the issues we have seen in our work in schools and with teachers, as they are indicative of problems that all Canadians face.
First, our research has shown that the resources that are available to Canadian educators vary widely in terms of quality. Provinces can mention educational resources but not mandate their use, and many outdated resources are still used in classrooms and used by Canadians nationwide. In some cases, these resources were developed before the widespread adoption of the Internet, and others have even been shown to backfire, making people less trusting of credible sources.
Digital media literacy is also not a singular thing. It is an umbrella term that encapsulates many different concepts and competencies. However, educators and Canadians in general are given little guidance about which resources are available to them and which are of high quality and grounded in evidence.
Second, there is an overall dearth of digital media literacy training. For example, it is a common occurrence to find educators in charge of digital media literacy instruction who have no specific training in the subject matter or who received their last training when studying to become a teacher. Even for those who choose to inform themselves about the latest developments in digital media literacy, the online world moves and changes so quickly that it is difficult to keep up.
In response to these issues, we believe there needs to be a national strategy to facilitate digital media literacy training. Through our work, we have found that in terms of scalability it is most efficient to train educators, as well as civil society organizations and community leaders, to reach as many Canadians as possible.
We also encourage the committee to consider approaching the problems of mis- and disinformation as being a widespread skills issue rather than simply an awareness issue. Merely making people aware of the need to critically engage with content they find online will not help us make any progress. Canadians need access to and training in digital media literacy skills, and that requires a sustained investment from the federal government to ensure high-quality resources are available and programs can continue to operate effectively.
Finally, informed citizenship requires access to high-quality information. In our resources, we say that the online information environment is polluted. Trustworthy information can certainly be found, but mis- and disinformation are mixed in. Disinformation also tends to be free and easily accessible. Indeed, it is in the interest of the purveyors of such information for it to be as easily accessed as possible, so there is a real need to take steps to limit the degree of information pollution online. One way to address this problem is to support journalists, especially local journalists, who are able to provide reliable information and give Canadians better options to find important information online.
I'm happy to address any questions the committee has, and I thank you for your time.
:
Honourable members of the committee, I am Maria Kartasheva, director of the Russian Canadian Democratic Alliance. I am accompanied by our counsel, Guillaume Sirois.
Thank you for your invitation and for addressing the national security threat posed by Russian propaganda and cognitive warfare.
The RCDA is a volunteer-led, non-profit organization created in the wake of Russia's criminal full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Our mission is to support the development of the Russian-Canadian community around the ideals of democracy, human rights and the rule of law. Opposing the invasion of Ukraine and Putin's regime is central to our work.
I want to begin by expressing my gratitude for your recognition of the serious threat that Russian information and influence operations pose to our democracy and society. Cognitive warfare aims to manipulate information and perceptions to influence thinking, to destabilize societies and to achieve strategic objectives without direct military confrontation. Russia employs these tactics as part of a broader strategy, viewing itself at war with the west, including Canada. Understanding this context is crucial for developing effective responses to safeguard our democracy.
I myself was a direct victim of this cognitive warfare. Russia sentenced me to seven years in prison for disseminating truthful information about the Bucha massacre while in Ottawa. I even faced the threat of deportation from Canada because of my political activism.
The RCDA, an organization that I co-founded, has been labelled an “undesirable” organization by the Putin regime. This designation puts all our partners and our collaborators, including me, at significant risk. One of our directors felt compelled to resign due to fears of persecution. This situation underscores the urgent need for decisive action to protect not only our democratic institutions but also the individuals who actively work to uphold them.
Meanwhile, despite Russia's long-standing disinformation campaigns in Canada, I have yet to see any individuals held accountable or facing consequences for their actions. Aside from public statements and ineffective sanctions, it appears that Canada is doing little to prevent Russia from gaining the upper hand in its cognitive war against Canadians.
As we have learned, notably in the course of the foreign interference commission, there are four key ways that Russian propaganda is impacting the work of parliamentarians.
First, Russian disinformation is shaping how Canadians, and by extension, members of Parliament, think about, and vote on, pivotal issues, including the support for Ukraine, NATO and even domestic issues, such as inflation.
Second, disinformation fuels fear and hostility, contributing to threats and violence against MPs, undermining their ability to perform their duties safely.
Third, the saturation of disinformation contributes to growing political apathy among the general population, weakening democratic participation.
Fourth, these disinformation campaigns aim to destabilize the very foundations of our democracy by spreading doubts about the integrity of elections, and of our democratic processes.
In response, the Government of Canada must do the five following things:
First, annually assess the scope of Russian and other state-sponsored disinformation targeting Canada, and report the findings to Parliament for transparency and accountability.
Second, adopt a strategy to combat Russian propaganda, focusing on protecting the work of members of Parliament and the Russian diaspora from such disinformation campaigns.
Third, establish an independent body similar to the CRTC or Elections Canada to monitor, to assess and to respond to foreign propaganda, ensuring the integrity of democratic processes is upheld.
Fourth, engage with the Russian diaspora and civil society organizations to help identify and combat Russian propaganda.
Fifth, enforce a decisive foreign policy that curbs Russia's disinformation, with diplomacy and global partnerships ensuring accountability for Russia's actions in Canada.
In conclusion, Russian interference in Canada's democratic processes, as exemplified by the ongoing disinformation campaigns, represents a significant threat that must not be ignored. For decades, Russia has been conducting destructive operations, such as the Tenet Media operation, with relative impunity. By recognizing the gravity of this threat and by committing to serious action, we can protect our democracy for future generations.
Thank you for your attention. I am happy to answer all of your questions.
:
Thank you very much, Chair.
I'd like to thank all of the witnesses for being here, but I want to particularly turn my attention to a story that came out in the last month, which I'm sure the witnesses are familiar with. It is the story about Tenet Media. There is a connection to my home province of Quebec in that there were two people in our West Island locality, Lauren Chen and someone else, who were named in a U.S. indictment. They are alleged to have been spreading misinformation. It could have been that they were, as I think the technical term goes, "useful idiots", but it could be that they were very knowingly doing what they were doing. I don't know, but let's talk about what was going on there.
According to the U.S. indictment:
After Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, RT was sanctioned, dropped by distributors, and ultimately forced to cease formal operations in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the European Union.
That's a very big market right there.
The indictment continued:
In response, RT created, in the words of its editor-in-chief, an "entire empire of covert projects" designed to shape public opinion in "Western audiences."
The indictment goes on to allege that Tenet Media is one of RT's covert projects.
How does the RT empire of covert projects hurt Ukrainian Canadians? I'm asking that of Madam Kartasheva.
:
Thank you very much for that answer and, in fact, for enlarging the question.
I want to point out that my riding of Châteauguay—Lacolle, which will soon be named Châteauguay—Les Jardins-de-Napierville has a wonderful agricultural region. We go right out to the American border.
We have a large number of Russian speakers of mixed Russian-Ukrainian heritage. We were very proud, even the small city of Châteauguay of 50,000 people, to be able to receive over 100 Ukrainian families who were displaced after Russia's invasion of Ukraine. It was all hands on deck and a wonderful community project. Indeed, the group has since been disbanded insofar as the Ukrainians have completely integrated, are working and are looking after themselves and their families, although the friendships are forever. It has very much sensitized our community to this disinformation, misinformation and how harmful it can be. How can we best fight back?
Ms. Tworek, disinformation, AI, social media, and how to counter disinformation and misinformation give rise to very serious issues.
This year, a think tank within Employment and Social Development Canada released a report listing the top 35 global disruptions we currently face. Disinformation is the biggest one facing the world today, according to the report.
Do you agree with that, Ms. Tworek?
:
My questions in this round are going to be for Ms. Tworek.
In a 2023 conference briefing note entitled “Media/Digital Literacy in an Era of Disinformation”, you reflected on a presentation you had made in 2022; it was published in the Journal of Intelligence, Conflict, and Warfare.
During this presentation, you talked about the fact that misinformation and disinformation often overlap with online abuse—in fact, you referenced it in the previous round of questions—that is directed towards professional groups, and marginalized groups like, for example, women, as I think you referenced. You said it's the foundation.
Why do you think that is?
:
Part of what we've seen in studies that we conducted since 2019 is that often these kinds of identity-based attacks and that kind of harassment can have disproportionate effects on people from racialized communities, 2SLGBTQ+ people or women. This can often overlap with some sort of disinformation about those individuals.
The distinction here is that, of course, you can have vigorous and rigorous discussion about issues, but we often see with these groups that is melded with attacks on their identities.
This has an influence on the political candidates themselves and also, I'd like to add, on their campaign teams. That's really important, because those are often people who are thinking about going into politics and potentially becoming candidates. They see the kind of online abuse and harassment directed at a candidate, and they think, “Maybe politics is not for me.”
If we're thinking about having a diverse legislature that represents the diversity of Canadians, we do need to address this issue.
:
In terms of the lack of explanatory journalism, another way of thinking about this is that we need to think about what journalism looks like in the 21st century, who can supply that information and so on. There are obviously a whole host of initiatives.
I'll just highlight one, which is The Conversation Canada, which was co-founded by a couple of my colleagues at UBC. The idea of that is pairing academics who are very bad at writing op-eds mostly with journalists who are able to edit. What we get there is academic expertise, but packaged in ways that most people can understand it. This can be freely reprinted. That's just one example of how we can amplify journalism and have it coming from experts.
In terms of social media expertise, this is quite a problematic area now because we see that social media platforms, even since 2022, have increasingly been shutting down the ability for researchers to access any data from platforms, whether it's CrowdTangle from Meta or X, which is now prohibitively expensive. It's made it harder and harder for us, as researchers, to be able to access the sort of data we need to answer a lot of the fundamental questions that this committee is proposing. That's why bills like Bill embed ideas around transparency for researchers within them.
:
Basically, my biggest issue and the fear of my colleagues in the organization and a lot of Russian citizens in Canada is that they will have problems in Canada when their citizenship or other immigration documents are processed, and that if they were persecuted in Russia, it will affect their stay in Canada. The biggest fear I had was that I would be deported. I had to live with that fear every day for a month, because I didn't know how this would end.
Again, no one apologized to me. I don't know why this happened. Maybe there is someone in IRCC who was interested in stopping me from becoming a Canadian citizen. Maybe there was someone there who wanted to get me back to Russia to end up in prison. I don't know. There was no investigation, to my knowledge, and I don't know if there would be any investigation.
I created a petition to prevent these cases from happening, by making a list of foreign laws that would not be preventing people from becoming citizens or getting visas, and IRCC responded that their system is perfectly fine and is working in the interests of people like me. You might be the judges of that, because I don't agree. I feel gaslighted by IRCC and, I guess, by the , and I'm not happy with that.
:
It depends on what kind of public they're targeting.
For younger people, that would be Telegram. For older people, maybe, or people who are not very confident with Telegram, there's Facebook. You can see so many bots on Facebook spreading Russian propaganda, and you can tell that those are not real people because they don't post anything else.
There are also Canadian Canadians, right, or immigrants in Canada from other countries. That would be other different media or also experts and professors in universities in Canada who spread Russian propaganda and visit Russia on obviously Kremlin-sponsored trips and then tell how great everything is in Russia and on occupied territories. Then they tour Canada and spread this information among Canadians.
There are definitely several strategies they use for different groups of people, but I can tell that those are working.
:
I can answer that question.
[English]
Maria can add something, if she feels the need to.
[Translation]
Canada is an important ally in many international alliances. Just think of NATO or the Five Eyes, an intelligence alliance that brings together five countries. Obviously, Canada is a very close partner of the United States.
It's not hard to imagine that hostile foreign actors—not just Russia, but also China and Iran—would want to gain access through the back door, so to speak, in order to undermine organizations like those that play an important role in international security.
I think there is a whole host.
The first, as I said, is about looking broadly at international relations to try to predict which countries are going to engage in this. This is probably much cheaper than some other modes of foreign interference. We need to be on the lookout for that, using our international-relations hat.
The second is about being on the lookout for how new technologies get used. There are stories of the Germans seizing on a new technology, whereas others, like the British, were relying on older technologies and didn't see it coming to a certain extent. We need to be forward-thinking in that regard.
The third lesson is that there's a lot we can do. We're not powerless in this regard. We have faced similar situations before with new technology, so we shouldn't just throw up our hands and say, “The Internet and generative AI are unprecedented, so there's nothing we can do.” There's actually a lot that has precedent. We can look at examples of how we've tried to deal with this before, in order to see what's worked and what hasn't.
That concludes our panel for today. I want to thank everyone for appearing.
Professor, I understood you to say that you were going to supply the committee with a copy of a study you had done. Could you do that? I'll make sure the clerk follows up with you.
I want to thank the Alliance for being here. I understand that you've been very busy appearing before parliamentary committees over the last little while. Thank you for again for taking the time to come before our committee.
Mr. Boyd, thank you as well.
Before we go, I'm just about to publish Thursday's agenda.
Mr Bains, your witness will be here on Thursday. I apologize because the way it was formatted, we actually didn't see the name on the Excel spreadsheet, but it was there after we went back. I know you brought that up in the last meeting. He will be here on Thursday.
The other thing I have to mention to the committee as well is that the social media companies have agreed to come after the Thanksgiving break, which means that we would have to extend this study for another two meetings. Given the level of interest and, quite frankly, given the important information the committee has been provided by our witnesses, I'm going to propose that we extend this by another two meetings so that we have the social media companies. They include TikTok, Google and Meta. They're all coming the week after Thanksgiving.
Do do I have agreement among committee members?
[Translation]
Are you fine with that, Mr. Trudel?