Perfect. Thank you very much.
Thank you, everybody, for being here today. Thank you for your patience while we voted.
I'd like to come back to some of the comments that my colleague Mr. Saini was asking you, Ms. Backman, but I'll also open it up to you, Ms. Reynolds, and to you, Mr. Cameron, on some of the stuff that you started talking about.
First, Ms. Backman, you used “right to be forgotten” and “right to erasure” almost interchangeably, it seemed to me. Going back to your point, what is also clear to a lot of us in the room is that if there are certain things in our past that we feel should be erased, somebody else might not feel that way. Particularly for members of Parliament, in running for public office there may be certain things that other people may find relevant to voting that maybe aren't necessarily what we would like to put out there—myself excluded completely, though.