Radical transparency really speaks to the entire disclosure process—to allowing people, putting it out there, letting people know who your vendors are, what your uses are, where you are collecting that data and why you are doing so. It's very much about engaging the public as opposed to, as you heard Ms. Khoo mention a number of times, this concept of secrecy that undermines the trust we already have. It also starts to subvert some of those really important Canadian values.
Radical transparency is starting with the principle that we are going to get out there and let our constituents know what we're doing with facial recognition, or any type of really advanced technology that can impact on their rights, bring them into the discussion in a meaningful way, and then report on some of those outputs, including reporting on vendor relationships.