A lot of the comments that have been made by the Commissioner to this committee in terms of looking at de-identified information, looking at a rights-based model, looking at increased powers for the Privacy Commissioner in terms of order-making powers, looking at penalties and the regime therefore, those are important things, as are looking at consent and calibrating to make sure consent is meaningful, looking at proportionality and necessity, and ensuring that certain purposes and certain uses are defined as either not being allowed or being allowed, without consent, but in appropriate cases.
Those are opportunities, again. We have to align them with looking at the international sector, the GDPR, what's happening in Quebec with Bill 64, ensuring there's interoperability and ensuring that we can deal with the private and public sector in a way that's consistent. We've seen, in terms of your study on mobility, these public-private partnerships. We see that more and more, so how do you ensure there is more harmony, that the government can't contract out by using private sector firms and that it's the same protection everywhere?