If I could address the question of cookies first, consistent with what I said earlier, I would not suggest that, again in the B.C. context, we take a technologically oriented approach to these things. I think general principles of privacy legislation should continue to be the order of the day. When it comes to cookies specifically, there are tools in your Internet browser, for example, and there are third-party pieces of software that you can often get for free on the Internet that will allow you to exercise an incredible degree of control over cookies. For exmple, you can choose to accept or reject cookies, as you see fit, and to allow yourself to be tracked as you surf across the Internet or not.
On the question of surveying children, clearly that introduces some very sensitive issues around the ability of youth to understand what it is they're entering into when they give up some of this information, sufficiently so that in the U.S., Congress passed the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998. Again, it is early days for these laws in Canada. For my part, I would hope that in British Columbia, we can, only three years into our law, continue to work with industry to try to ensure that in the case of children and generally in relation to some of these technological challenges, those general principles are adhered to and that the legislation works well in its present form without radically altering the approach to some of these technologies.