Thank you to our witnesses.
I'm a former high school teacher. I taught school for 34 years.
My daughter actually teaches an educational technology course out of the University of Alberta, where she teaches online to teachers who will end up teaching in an online platform. The education industry will have to be aware of how these types of things are happening in the future, so it's how you do the training and everything else.
I noted, from your digital literacy discussion, that those types of things are needed for the students, but also at the educational level, at the teaching level, with the opportunity perhaps to go to teachers' conventions and those types of things. They're great opportunities for awareness, certainly.
I have a question about something you mentioned earlier. It's the concern that students realize they're being watched at school, and realize they're being watched at home, and therefore don't see their privacy as being something that they have any control over. Of course, if they get into sites on school time and in a school setting, you know what kind of difficulty would occur there, so they have to be able to protect themselves. I'm wondering if you have looked at how that can all be done.
As well, when you talk about digital literacy, I'm wondering if you're also explaining to them that this isn't a free service, and that the reason it's out there is for these industries to be able to gather information, which I think sometimes we forget.
I'm wondering if you could comment on that.