Members, I wasn't expecting to chair. If you would allow me, I have a few questions.
We've learned over recent years, mainly through the CBC, of various programs by CSE, such as EONBLUE, whereby captures were put at the Internet backbone and the impact and inspection was used to scan vast amounts of data that go through the Internet.
There are other programs like Levitation, if I'm not mistaken, which screened 10 to 15 million downloads for suspicious events and then transmitted the results to our security agencies.
Another one was Wi-Fi at a Canadian airport, where metadata of Canadians was stored and analyzed as part of a pilot project.
CSE gathers a lot of information. It's not supposed to spy on Canadians, but can inadvertently do so. When it has that information, based on SCISA as it's written, if a law enforcement agency wants that data about a Canadian, technically it would need a warrant, in the wake of Spencer and Wakeling.