Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Through you, I'd like to thank the witnesses for being here today.
I want to start first with Mr. Kushwaha. I'm going to put these in three buckets: the consumers of information, the creators of information and, of course, the channels of communication.
You were talking a little bit about being an average person who is out there looking at the media. We know that there have been cases, and we just heard in the previous panel of instances, where main street media have erroneously put out information, so more and more people are turning to different platforms to get their information.
How would an average person—and you talked a little bit about the Finland model—distinguish whether what they're reading is factual or not? For instance, my mom would share stuff that she saw on Facebook about an actor passing away. It's been three times that poor actor has passed away, but she keeps sharing the information thinking it's true. How does a person distinguish between what is real and what is not without sharing it?
They keep sharing the same misinformation, and they take it as true. What would you recommend to us?