Yes, thank you.
I'm glad Professor Kerr raised that point, because this takes us back to the constitutional question. PIPEDA, the regulation of personal information in society, does not occur in a vacuum. For example, with respect to the case of notification of important changes in the contract, Ontario's brand new Consumer Protection Act deals with exactly that. It deals with requirements to provide explicit notification to consumers, if you ever want to change the terms of their contract on 30 days' notice. So we're moving into a realm where the provinces have a very important say in exactly how terms of contracts between private organizations and individuals are played out. PIPEDA is general because it has to leave some room for constitutional maneuverability in terms of what the provinces can legislate and what the federal government can legislate. Many of our consumer protections acts deal with that exact point.