Thank you very much.
Just before I get into my questions, knowing that we are short on time here I would invite all of the witnesses here, if there are things that you didn't have a chance to address, to please feel free to send information to this committee. These are big questions with technical answers. Two, three or four minutes is certainly not enough time to see them appropriately addressed.
I certainly see one of the biggest challenges with addressing this is even just the evolution of the space of artificial intelligence and facial recognition. I'd mentioned in the previous round, with the conflict in Europe right now, the implications of this on how military uses some of this technology and the Geneva Convention, for example, deal with bombs that are dropped from planes, but there's a whole new space that's opened up.
Ms. Brandusescu, as this technology is being developed, in terms of research, government, private corporations, testing and understanding of the impacts on this technology and its impacts on society, do you have suggestions as to a path forward for this committee that would ensure that there is an appropriate understanding of what this means for Canadian citizens, and the fact that we are facing a world where AI and facial recognition become more and more part of our daily lives?