The point about increasing the judicial remedies is that one of the big defects in the Privacy Act that the Privacy Commissioner points to is that the provisions around the collection, use, and disclosure are ones that you can't take to court. You don't have recourse there, yet those are increasingly vital in safeguarding information in all sorts of contexts, whether they be administrative, national security, or law enforcement.
It's absolutely vital that we have something there. Is it going to cost more? Probably, but I would say, again, that recourse an important aspect of protecting privacy rights. Without that, you can't make the Privacy Act work in the context that it's being asked to work in.