Thank you.
We're doing a lot of things. We're working very closely with our provincial and territorial partners. This is one of the elements I'm very proud of in terms of our close collaboration. We've issued, for instance, a joint resolution on the responsible use of AI, setting out our expectations in terms of privacy practices vis-à-vis AI. We've done that with respect to children's privacy, highlighting things like the fact that technologies should not be used to nudge children and minors to make privacy-harmful decisions. We're looking at all of those aspects with a particular focus on AI, but we're looking as well to see how we can use technology ourselves within the OPC to be more efficient.
We've launched an online portal for privacy impact assessment submissions, to make that more seamless. We have developed a tool to assess whether certain privacy breaches would give rise to a real risk of significant harm. Again, it's not to replace the human decision-making but to provide assistance on that. We don't see technology as something that's prevented by privacy. You can have and you must have innovation, public interest and economic success alongside privacy, so we're really maximizing looking at that. Of course, there are always risks with the use of data in powering innovation. This is why I've said we do use data to support innovation, but we have to use innovation to protect personal information.