Given that, and given some of the things we're looking at as a committee—her role and the interaction—one of the concerns I have is that sometimes government, even though it may be with the best of intentions, tends to overregulate or to set parameters that actually stifle innovation and creativity.
One of my biggest concerns about social media and so on is that the technology changes so rapidly. I'm not always quite sure that government can keep up with the rapidly changing things that are going on in social media and related sectors.
From your testimony, it sounds as though you would say that your organization is pretty much operating in a more self-regulatory environment, that you're trying to do your corporate best to make sure you're respecting privacy issues, and that you're operating in an appropriate environment, etc.
Is it a strong enough model, in your opinion, to make sure we're all endeavouring as well as we can to protect people's personal privacy while also making sure that the people who are more expert in keeping up with the technological change can react to it a lot faster than we, as parliamentarians, can in trying to come up with laws and chasing after things have already happened? Do you have any more advice in that regard for us?