The biggest privacy disaster in the public sector in English-speaking countries in the last several months was in November or December. Tapes were lost in the United Kingdom, moving by courier from one government department to another, with information on something like 25 million people. It was some huge mass of data. It brought the government of Gordon Brown to a halt and increased the powers of the information commissioner and so forth. It was just a huge scandal. It was in our newspapers every day for a relatively long period of time.
I don't want to see that kind of thing going on. I want the average Canadian to be satisfied that if they give their personal information to the Canadian government, the Privacy Commissioner is there as a privacy watchdog, that rules are in place that are sophisticated and ready for the 21st century, and that the rules are going to be followed.
I am a pretty good fan of how the private sector is complying with PIPEDA and with the legislation in British Columbia and Alberta, but every month or two Alberta is whacking somebody--Winners or somebody like that--for doing things they shouldn't be doing. So there's still a big learning curve.