My follow-up question to that is that I'm wondering how much of Facebook's actions are maybe due to a perceived weakness among our position. One of the things I find very disturbing in all of this—and this comes out of another committee I serve on—is government is moving all of our advertising out of local Canadian newspapers and radio and pushing a large share to Facebook. I have to wonder about the laughs they might be having in their head office knowing they're fighting with you over PIPEDA, but at the same time the government is pushing taxpayers' money to them.
Then I look through your departmental results and I look at how we, as a government, take privacy rather less seriously. I'm looking at a National Post report. When a National Post reporter asked a question of PSPC and DND, within an hour and a half they got a threatening phone call from the president of Irving, threatening a lawsuit because PSPC and DND gave away private information for the third time. The government gave away private information to a corporation.
I look at your departmental results and look at the percentage of government organizations that are informed and guided to protect privacy rights. Our target is only 60% of government organizations to actually follow our own rules. I wonder if Facebook looks at this and just thinks that if you guys aren't serious about privacy anyway, why should they be? Oh, and by the way, at the same time they'll take taxpayers' money from us.
I'm outraged, frankly, at the stupidity of it all. The same time that you're fighting against them, the government's handing them cheques, and at the same time—