Concerning the principle behind the right to be forgotten and the right to make sure you know what you're signing, there are laws in Canada. If somebody's information is on a web page, there are laws already available to them to have it taken off the web page. They're there; you don't need anything else to do it. To reach out somewhere else to have your information taken off a web page because you've decided to do something different.... We can't do that anyway, so we can't add regulation.
As to the right for consent, those documents are long. They are that long because there has been a lot of interaction between governments and the lawyers of governments and the lawyers of the organizations to put those together. Believe me, an organization would rather have those documents be as short as possible. They make those documents that long not only to ensure that they're protecting themselves but also to protect the consumer, because if they were ever taken to court, they would have to make sure that the stuff in there gave proper rights to the consumer in purchasing that product. It's in there; they have to make sure it is, because you can't, as an organization anywhere in the world, especially Canada, dupe a consumer: you would never survive the courts.
It's in there, then. To try to put together regulations to say “make sure you know what you're signing” is just not necessary. It's something that's already....