Mr. Chair, if I may, I'm going to finish Mr. Jeneroux's time, if that's all right.
I'm going to pick up on something that Mr. Molloy mentioned. I think it was in response to Mr. Erskine-Smith's question or maybe it was in your opening remarks. You mentioned situations where reporting may compound harm done in a privacy breach, if I understood correctly.
Could you maybe elaborate on some of the perils of reporting where, yes, somebody's privacy may have been breached? Perhaps they had not come to harm as a result, and yet the reporting process may create harm.