Thank you.
This has been very fascinating. Ms. Wylie, it's been great to have you bring a citizen's lens to this discussion.
One of the things I'll say, on the positive side of being a Canadian politician in Parliament during the last 14 years, is that we've had some really interesting examples of civic engagement with digital issues. The neutrality battle was very much driven by consumers and citizens, and I think it helped frame the policy in this country. Citizen engagement with copyright influenced two governments to withstand heavy U.S. corporate pressure on the DMCA and notice and take down. We have notice and notice, and we've received all kinds of fist-waving from the Europeans and the Americans, but we've held to a distinctly Canadian position on where we are in the digital realm.
What surprises me about the Cambridge Analytica-Facebook scandals is that we haven't seen as much in the way of grassroots civic engagement, but you were involved in community discussions and you were out having these discussions. Do you believe, from what you're hearing, that this is an issue that citizens are becoming more engaged with, an issue they want to have a voice in and be heard on?