Some of the comments earlier were in regard to the right to be forgotten. The ability of the Government of Canada, for instance—or any government around the world—to remove the digital footprint of a particular posting is next to impossible from a regulatory standpoint. You can't do it globally.
As a matter of fact, there was a case in B.C. recently where an individual had been stealing intellectual property and selling it on the web, and there was an attempt to have that reference removed globally. There was push-back from the company involved, saying, “You're out of your jurisdiction. How can you possibly say globally, from a B.C. court?” That's a real challenge.
The issue should be more around how companies address this. Companies that are reputable and value their reputation are, I think, complying with these kinds of requests, particularly where children are involved. In trying to regulate that, and in trying to say, “This fits but that doesn't fit,” you're asking for trouble in terms of either missing something or going too far. It's next to impossible to get a perfect balance.