Thank you very much.
I want to thank Mr. Therrien for joining us today and answering all these very important questions. I agree with my colleagues.
I want to go back to your opening statement when you were talking about transparency and consent. You wondered whether it was obvious to Canadians that their data was being used this way.
I believe it was as early as 2020 that there was a news release from the Prime Minister's Office about the fact that Public Health was going to start using de-identified mobility data to help with its fight against COVID-19. I wasn't part of the government at the time, but I certainly remember hearing about this happening. I remember the tweets regularly from our chief public health officer, Theresa Tam, talking about this data and what it meant. We knew, for example, if public health measures were being followed because the mobility data showed that people weren't moving as much, and then we could find trends because of the mobility data. I saw regularly information coming from the government about how this data was being used, and I didn't see any concern about it until the opposition brought it up a couple of months ago.
When you say that the government could have been more proactive in its communications about the use of mobility data, how exactly would you suggest that could have been done better?