I think you're right. I think defaults are where we need to start.
Mr. Levin, Mr. Gautrais, do you have anything to add to what Mr. Kerr has said in response to any of the questions I've asked? No?
I'll move on to some other lines of questioning. I was a database administrator. I was in Oracle; I looked after Oracle databases and so on. I'm not pretending I'm an expert by any stretch of the imagination in this particular field; however, I guess you could say I qualified once as an IT professional, at one point in time.
Looking after databases, particularly relational databases, particularly in client accounts dealing with particular information, there's a huge difference between deactivating something and deleting something. When it comes to the protection of people's privacy and their personal information and the right to be forgotten, I don't think we have a very explicit regulatory or legislative approach in dealing with the right of people to have their information completely removed, taken away from, or deleted from various organizations' databases.
Further complicating this, of course, is if my information has been collected during, for example, a signing on to download a free app or whatever the case might be. The information can then be resold or distributed from that point forward. I might ask the original company to delete that information; however, the damage has been done if that information has been resold. You can't trace that back.
What are some of your opinions on the concerns I've raised about being able to actually have my information taken out of a particular database if I so choose?