Thank you, honourable member.
I'd direct you to our latest annual report on RFIDs. Of the companies we surveyed, two indicated already that they've linked goods to personal information and one was using RFIDs to track employees. So it's moving down.
On the accountability bill, we appeared in Parliament last week to point out, notably, that we're concerned that, as it is now presented, this bill will lower the level of personal information protection in three organizations: Atomic Energy of Canada, the CBC, and VIA Rail. All are now covered by PIPEDA, as I said very rapidly. PIPEDA has a better level of personal information protection than the Privacy Act does.
To give you an example, honourable member, if you travel with VIA Rail, under the Privacy Act you have a right to see your file, and you can ask for a correction. But if they don't make the correction and you think you're right, or if there's a slip and somehow your travel information is spilled--published--and it causes you some damage, you have no right of redress. So as we pointed out, why would we take a step backwards? Personal information also needs accountability at the highest level for the Canadian public.