Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you for appearing.
Ms. Lawson, I want to ask you a question with regard to the Internet. I know we've moved on, but I want to digress and follow up on what we had been talking about.
Usually when we change laws or make laws, we do so because there's a problem. We have new legislation or whatever, and we find out that it's infringing or there's some other problem, so we want to change it. We've heard a lot today about especially the sharing of information with foreign countries, especially with the United States, and there's something that I don't quite understand.
Do you have examples of why we need stricter disclosure? The only time I hear about an infringement where somebody's rights are violated is when someone has possibly been a member of an organization that blows up buildings. Why wouldn't a foreign country want to have some type of disclosure?
I hear the other side talking, but we've corrected it. And that was not an example of disclosure, that was an example of abuse of disclosure.
Why are we doing this? Do we have examples of where...? Quite frankly, if the Americans want to know about me, I have nothing to hide. I have no problem at all.
What's the big deal?