Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you very much, Mr. Sherman, for being here today. I don't think there's a single member of Parliament—I would be surprised if there is one—who isn't a Facebook subscriber, a Facebook customer. I could be wrong. I know Mr. Angus quit Twitter, but I think he still likes his Facebook page.
I'm glad you're here to give us a better sense of what you are trying to do. I'm fairly sure that your company's view is to have corporate responsibility and to make sure you're doing the best job you can do.
I come at this as a father of a 13-year-old and an 8-year-old daughter. My initial question would be whether you've taken any additional measures as they relate to minors who are Facebook subscribers and are participating. Do you do any monitoring of content within your organization to, let's just say, protect young people against themselves to some degree? I realize that when you post something, you've made a conscious decision to go and do that. But Mr. Angus is talking about private messages showing up, and other things going on.
Are you doing anything special, out of the ordinary, for underage users of the system, rather than for adults of the system, where we would assume that with adults, cooler heads would prevail when they're participating in Facebook?
Do you have anything special or specific that you do around underage users of Facebook?