Okay.
Very quickly, then, in one minute: first, we have always tried to tailor the law to small and medium business. Some of the examples I'm talking about here are mega-megacorporations, not small and medium-sized businesses.
Second, on stifling innovation, I don't believe innovation always has a direct link to privacy. I think innovation is mostly encouraged by capital formation, entrepreneurial capital that's free, and levels of education or technical knowledge.
Third, my office has no objection if people want to sell their personal information to get services free. We have never said that. We have no problem with the Internet model. We just want the law that Parliament adopted in 1999 to be applied correctly: you have to consent, and you have to understand what you're selling and what will be done with it.
Fourth, on the right to be forgotten, I think this right is an important concept. We have to seriously look at the ways and means of enforcing it. Parliament in its wisdom said that PIPEDA that you have a right of deletion of your personal information, so we in a sense already have it, but we have big issues with some companies who built in no ability to delete young people's information.