Thank you, Mr. Chair, for your indulgence on my getting the last question. It's very important and interesting testimony.
I'd like to pick up on this idea of ownership and consent in the context of government. If I go on Air Canada, and they ask me for my email and cellphone number so they'll text me when my flight is delayed or anything, I have a choice to do that. However, there are things in government where you don't have a choice. You have to provide information. Your taxes are required. The idea of consent immediately has a different implication when something has to be provided.
In that context, how do you see consent, or even who owns that data? If I go to Air Canada, I can take my profile off. I have a choice. But with government, if there's a criminal record, you can't say you want to delete this or change that. The information no longer really belongs to the person.
Where does ownership and consent go when you're dealing with government?