If I may, I would encourage the member to read the report by the Cyberspace Solarium Commission that was released by the bipartisan U.S. congressional commission in February, which is very thorough on all the challenges that the cyber domain poses for democracy.
While we're having very technical conversations about whether a caucus is secure and whether conversations are secure, think about the adversarial intent and it is relatively straightforward. One is to sow discord in our democratic societies by polarizing conversations. The other is to show that democracy is chaotic and dysfunctional in order to hold up authoritarian systems. In a virtual Parliament, we also have the opportunity to demonstrate that democracy does function and is resilient in times of crisis, in times of emergency, because people in Russia and China can stream the Parliament as much as we can in Canada.
I think we need to be much more broadly aware of the broader objectives of our adversary over the tactical sort of dimensions of “can the adversary extract particular aspects of data”, because the adversary every day is trying to discredit democracy and sow discord.