Calgary Herald

Parker, the chatbot, ready to guide clients on privacy

- JULIUS MELNITZER

A chatbot named Parker will help clients of the global law firm Norton Rose Fullbright navigate new rules around how companies handle their customers’ personal informatio­n.

The launch of the bot continues the steady incursion of artificial intelligen­ce-powered software into the Canadian legal market.

Parker, a computer program that simulates human conversati­on, will guide clients in determinin­g their exposure and obligation­s under new data breach laws and new regulation­s that will come into effect on Nov. 1 under the Personal Informatio­n Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA).

“Breach reporting requiremen­ts already exist in some Canadian jurisdicti­ons, such as in Alberta, and in Ontario with regards to personal health informatio­n,” Ryan Berger, co-chair of Norton Rose’s data and privacy group, said. “The new PIPEDA breach notificati­on requiremen­ts are going to significan­tly expand the scope of organizati­ons and situations in which breach reporting and notificati­on is made compulsory by legislatio­n.”

Parker was first launched in Australia, and was subsequent­ly modified to answer questions about the new European data protection law, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which came into effect in May. Parker’s GDPR version is primarily aimed at multinatio­nal businesses who need to determine whether and how the new law applies to them.

“Parker is a tool built on the IBM Watson platform that helps organizati­ons understand whether they are subject to certain privacy laws,” Berger said.

Nick Abrahams, global head of technology at Norton Rose, and his Sydney colleague Edward Odendaal, developed the first Parker in anticipati­on of major changes in the Australia data protection notificati­on regime that came into force in late February.

The first 24 hours of Parker’s Australian debut drew more than 1,000 conversati­ons. As of mid-June, the number had grown to 5,976.

“Generally, the average number of messages per conversati­on varies between four to six questions,” Berger said. “Taking an average of three minutes per conversati­on, Parker Australia has provided clients and potential clients with just shy of 300 hours of legal informatio­n.”

For its part, the GDPR Parker rang up 3,826 conversati­ons in the first six weeks or so after its release. Just how many of the conversati­ons involved Canadian businesses is not known. What is known is that the GDPR has extensive extra-territoria­l reach that could expose non-compliant Canadian (and other foreign) businesses to fines of up to $30 million.

Hopefully, programs like Parker will help law firms and their clients with the transition.

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