Indeed.
This raises the whole question of online age verification and techniques for determining whether a person is underage or not. This will be important in the context of Bill C‑27, which explicitly grants rights and treats information differently. It's an issue we're looking at, in the privacy field. There's a lot of discussion about it. In fact, the Information Commissioner's Office of the U.K. has issued guidelines on verification tools.
What we're saying, at the Office of the Privacy Commissioner, is that these tools need to be appropriate and not ask for too much personal information. Age verification needs to be managed, but we don't necessarily want to ask for too much personal information to do that. That said, there are ways of doing it and technologies to do it. It's another area where we need to be creative.
Also, it has to be context-appropriate. Some sites may be higher-risk and will require tighter verification. We can think of gambling or pornography sites, for example. Some sites may be less sensitive. Others may be aimed specifically at children. There may be a presumption.
I think this will be part of the implementation of this law. My office will have a role to play in this as it can issue guidelines.
In addition, the bill also provides for the creation of codes of practice and certification programs.
This will encourage organizations to adhere to a series of rules. If they respect them, it will have an effect on the complaints process, which will be beneficial for these organizations. So it will be one more tool. I suspect that the Office of the Privacy Commissioner will be able to work on it, precisely to give these details.
The Office of the Privacy Commissioner also has an advisory mandate. Companies, especially small and medium-sized enterprises, can contact us for answers to specific questions. We're here to help them with questions like these, especially those of a more technical nature.