Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to the witnesses for coming here, joining us and trying to be part of the solution.
I'm trying to determine the impact of multimedia messages and what it means to participate in our electoral process.
I live in Richmond, British Columbia. It's probably one of the most diverse cities in all of Canada. In fact, the United Nations recognized a five-kilometre stretch in the city called the “Highway to Heaven.” We have over 28 different faith-based organizations situated side by side. I've lived there my whole life.
I've tried to engage with communities. One community stands out. I know Ms. Wong mentioned the fear, earlier—everybody has. We often try to engage the Chinese community. If you're knocking on their door, they're not opening it. There's a lack of registering and giving out personal information and those kinds of things.
If we look at messages they're receiving on social media platforms, how can our security services distinguish between materials written in Cantonese or Mandarin that originate from a government source in China and those written by Chinese Canadians here in Canada?
Could Ms. Wong answer, please?