Okay.
With respect to privacy, I have the pleasure and honour of sitting on the industry committee. With Bill C-27, there's an aspect of privacy in that, with PIPEDA and the relevant sections and so forth. Privacy is a huge thing these days, which is an understatement—I'm using very common language, if I can say that—in terms of striking a balance. Like many of our representatives, I worked in the private sector before I had the distinct pleasure of serving the residents I currently serve. When you are provided a device from your employer to utilize, it is their device. You need to use it with judiciousness and diligence. There's a balance there. I've always seen that a balance needs to be struck.
Within that, within the government operations, there have to be guardrails within the departments, and they need to follow the PIAs, the privacy impact assessments. I literally learned this in the last couple of hours. I sit on two other committees, so it's been a busy week. With the PIAs, there is an agreement that when investigations need to happen, they should happen, and the devices and the contents of those devices need to be looked at.
Also, taking a step back, if I'm working for Nathan's organization and I enter into an agreement with the federal government, there is consent that you will use this device but you will use it responsibly. I'm putting that out there, because there needs to be that balance. If processes were not followed properly, you would need to correct those internal processes and the governance, of course.
Do you not agree that consent is important and that balance is important, but the notion that there has to be responsibility on the end-user is important as well?