Certainly.
This will tie in and build off of this.
I think one thing to remember for the Canadian context is that the fact that we have the Privacy Act and PIPEDA helps us to delineate using data within government versus in private. I don't want us to start losing track of that difference. A consumer is one thing and a resident citizen is another thing. I think we need to hold onto that delineation, perhaps, when we imagine what's next.
That's where I'm going to say the opportunity is as well. There are opportunities. Again, I keep coming back to the smart city context. We cannot lose control of stuff that is input to policy. To say in procurement that, if it's data related to these things, that ownership should fall to a city or to the country.... If these are inputs, these are things you can update in procurement, rather than trying to manage this all through privacy. I cannot agree enough. There are so many things here that go outside of privacy.
In terms of controlling inputs and then using data in our government better, there is lots of opportunity there—ample opportunity there—and it means we have to make sure it doesn't get privatized.