I think it's not solely legislation. I think what's important--and I think I addressed it very briefly in one of the recommendations I made--is that the offices of the privacy commissioners, both federally and provincially, should have, as part of their responsibility, education of the public about where there are threats to privacy. I think that would probably require more money going into hiring more people to go out and spread the word by a variety of means.
Of course, this ties into other issues about making public the fact that when there are privacy violations, people should hear about them. They shouldn't be behind the scenes and then some newspaper reporter discovers it and tells you about it. This is an ongoing education process. The Internet is a technology, I think, that appeared with such rapidity that there was hardly any time to adapt to it and discover some of the issues related to it.