Mr. Chair, I don't want to eat into Mr. Martin's time, but let me make a general comment about the act that I think is important for the committee to understand.
The ten principles that form the basis of the act were negotiated over four long and difficult years—I know, because I was there—by a group of privacy advocates, business representatives, and government officials. We very deliberately did not make it media specific or sector specific or technology specific, because we wanted those principles to apply no matter how technology changed, no matter what sector you're dealing with, and no matter what medium you're in or how that medium was evolving, so that the ten principles we agreed on—and it was, as the Attorney General said, a series of delicate compromises—would last for a long time and could govern conduct no matter what comes at us in terms of technology change or other innovations. That's why we're very supportive of the basic principles of this act.