Yes. If I go to the children's online privacy issue, this has been a concern of many privacy advocates, many forward thinkers, for five or six years now, as we watch the Internet companies moving into the huge market representing our children and especially the group called “tweens”, who are about nine to twelve. Some of you may have tweens. They have their own websites that are very lucrative enterprises. They spend a lot of time on these websites. We had funded some research into the privacy implications for children and last June we launched an initiative with our provincial colleagues to really step up the information going to children and going to their parents about what to do and what not to do online.
So we've started our own youth privacy website, which is in conjunction with provincial commissioners, and we've also started a youth privacy blog. And then there's a section for parents on what to know when your kid first starts going online. I think I heard the other day that children are online now at two. As soon as they can recognize a letter, I guess they're online these days. So it has been a big priority for my office in the last year.