I stress that if a committee has its meeting in camera, it's an offence for the member to go out and talk about what happened in the meeting after or during. It doesn't matter when it is. If the thing is in camera, you're not supposed to disclose what happened in it.
So if you do it by running outside and saying, “So and so is in here now talking about this and that”, blah, blah, blah...I don't know that there's a big difference between that and typing something on your electronic device and sending it somewhere else. They're both incorrect; they're offensive to the rules that govern our committees, and so on. So both are a problem.
In reference to the presence or absence of members in the House, members can go outside the House and say people weren't there. Our rules don't prohibit that. It's just making reference to their presence or absence in debate in the House. Is typing a note on Twitter, or tweeting—however you do that, I don't know—different from going outside and saying, “You know, I was sitting in there today and John Doe wasn't there. Imagine. In fact, there was a whole list of members of that party who weren't there. I can read you the list.” That's my concern.