Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to say at the outset how important the work of your office is. For too many years, we've been played for suckers by Silicon Valley, that it was about choice, that it was opt-in, opt-out. We could read the privacy provisions. It never respected the privacy provisions in building its models.
What we've learned with Cambridge Analytica and Facebook is that this is not simply a question of the rights and the choices of consumers. This is about the democratic rights of citizens. It's about the questions of a nation state being able to actually ensure that its citizens can live in a world where they choose certain rights that are protected and inalienable, and one of those rights, as you said, is the right to be free from surveillance.
I want to start off with a few simple questions. Your finding was that Facebook broke the law of Canada with its breach of PIPEDA. Is that correct?