Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you, sir. This has been a very interesting discussion. If you've been following the course of our looking at the issue of social media, you'll know that we've been dealing with two major issues. One is the issue of not interfering with development, but ensuring that more vulnerable people—particularly young people—are not unfairly targeted, and that people's privacy is protected when it needs to be.
What we've heard from some of the main drivers on this new information highway is that they never speed, they always stop at the lights, they never do illegal left-hand turns, and there's no need to have police anywhere on any of this data-flow highway, and that things will just drive better.
I'm concerned that we have a case with Nexopia, which has breached the Privacy Commissioner's.... I think the Privacy Commissioner has found 24 breaches in Nexopia's handling of information. They haven't bothered to meet the deadlines set by the Privacy Commissioner; they're taking her to court to stand in the way of some of them.
Do you believe the Privacy Commissioner should have more tools to ensure compliance, so that we make sure that all the players in the market are following the rules?