Thank you very much. It seems that you have an excellent grasp of all this.
When you think about privacy--and there's such a big world out there, and so many people holding information--how can an individual be really definite that his or her privacy is protected?
As an example, the other night I was calling about my credit card, and I wound up with a call centre in India. That is a TD credit card, and someone in India has my privacy. Now, even if I had the right to retrieve it, what assurance do we have in the Privacy Act, whether it be a government department or some outside source, that it is protected? How do you ever clean up your privacy file? Most of us have been around for a while, and there's all kinds of information out there that somebody has on us.
As a researcher, I suspect you have a number of graduate students helping you with all this work you're doing. What information could you offer to our committee in terms of how we restrict and control information on people's privacy?