Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Monsieur Therrien, I want to thank you for your wisdom. With Bill C-11 coming down the pipe, it's so important that we lean one way versus the other way.
I know with facial recognition, when you first see it, it's so cool. We all heard about the issue with Cadillac Fairview, the shopping mall issue. Maybe we'll get to that today, but even sites like Facebook, they have these tag suggestions and they insert them as default settings. Theses sites are collecting our data, our faces, and many times people are totally unaware of it. That's where I want to start our conversation today.
I come from Oshawa. Oshawa is one of those communities that historically built cars and sent people back and forth across the border, things along those lines. I want to talk to you a little bit about the international utilization of facial recognition. I've heard that border efficiencies could be improved. I was wondering if you could comment on the opportunity, perhaps, for these opt-in, opt-out options if we're going back and forth across borders for business or as individuals.
Are there any international conversations about the right to delete and destroy information that may be gathered from Canadians as they cross borders into other countries?