First of all, one of the points that hasn't been mentioned today, but I think has come up in previous testimony, is that even if we put aside the grandiose right to be forgotten in the European sense, PIPEDA and privacy legislation across Canada, the principles that we've referred to so many times, already include a principle about data accuracy. In situations where there's data that's untruthful or that is misleading about people, we already think that the privacy law suggests there should be a form of redress.
As I think Professor Florian Martin-Bariteau and Professor Teresa Scassa talked about, the idea of a right to erasure of wrongful information that's online could be fortified. My view is that it's already covered under the existing principles, but it may be the case that in the context of social media and young people, we ought to use that as an anchor in, to talk about something much less grandiose and vague than a right to be forgotten and something much more specific that protects children. I think we should do that.