I'll be right to the spot and the chair will help me out.
Thank you for the testimony. I've been reading over some research. My apologies if anything I ask has already been queried, but a politician, a microphone, and some time is a hard combination to completely resist, and ignorance has never stopped me from speaking before.
I have one question about this right to be forgotten, technologically speaking. We've seen with some technological advancements that you can rent a movie, for example, with a delete option built into it. After a certain amount of time it simply expires. Has this ever been explored with personal information, so that once such information is granted to a private company, there is a built-in algorithm to automatically delete it after a five-year period? Is this a technology that's ever been explored successfully, and is it something that could be built into law? You've talked about the onerous nature of having to audit five years later whether information is actually being destroyed or, as I think you said, ending up in a granary in Saskatchewan. I find that far too typical, somehow. Is there a technological fix to this that's been explored?