Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you to the witnesses today.
I'm going to perhaps build and broaden the discussion on video surveillance, and to a certain extent Google Street View and others that my colleague has introduced.
I just want to say that I'm relieved, in reading your report about the issues you're dealing with, that we're catching up with the law on this. Our starting point goes from Deuteronomy 24:10 to a 1604 case—something to do with every man's house being his castle—to a 1974 Supreme Court of Canada decision in Eccles, where we dealt with the right to privacy in a house, but that was with respect to police officers entering a home.
We come up to more recent cases that deal with this issue in a much better way, for example, Heckert v. 5470 Investments Ltd., which I'll refer to as Heckert, and Milner v. Manufacturer's Life Insurance Company. Are you familiar with those cases?