Thank you very much.
I'd like to go back to the part that you discussed in the beginning when you outlined the key areas on controls, particularly, in this case, not the Google search engine but YouTube. Obviously certain things on YouTube that would go against the user policy are automatically removed, or the person is informed that it's been removed because they're violating the policy.
I would be very interested in knowing how those determinations are made. For instance, is it an individual person who looks at those? Is it an algorithm? Are you using some sort of AI? Are there keywords that you're looking at?
There are a couple of things that I'm a bit concerned about. After the testimony at this committee of Mr. Vickery, I posted my questions back and forth, just like you and I are doing right now. It's televised; it's on ParlVu. One of the questions that I asked was about the fact that some of this data had been found on a Google drive. When I went to post that intervention, which was from a parliamentary television site, it was found to violate the YouTube.... The only caption was the name of our study, which is the breach of personal information involving Cambridge Analytica and Facebook. It was removed, and I was told that I would have penalties. I went for a review, and of course, after a review it was posted back on again.
I know of another member of Parliament who asked a question in question period about cannabis, and that was removed because it was said that he was promoting the use of drugs.
How are these determinations made? What are the algorithms or terms, or how do you do that with YouTube? There are, at the same time, an awful lot of things on YouTube that promote hate, that are anti-democratic, that are perhaps even put there by interests that have links to international crime.
I worry that the way these algorithms are being used might not necessarily be capturing what we really want to remove, while free speech in an environment like this, which is a parliamentary committee, has been actually caught in this net.