I think I understand which questions were in there. I'm going to try. If I miss anything, please let me know. Let's start at the end, maybe, and go back in terms of the information environment during an election and protecting MPs.
When the writ period is in place, we do report the activity to SITE, and the SITE task force up to the panel. As part of that work, there were also briefings of political parties. There are a few mechanisms in place where, if there are indications of activity, that information can be shared up.
As this committee has also heard many times, disinformation or information operations in and of themselves do not mean they're significant enough that they could impact the results of an election. That is a very.... That's a high threshold, I would say. While we're always wanting to understand the information environment, there's also a lot of research under way into “does a disinformation campaign actually change people's behaviour?”
I can't speak to that, but I flag it because I think we've made progress in having ways that we can trigger information, share that with political parties and share that with the panel. Just because there's disinformation—of which there's a lot—and misinformation in an election period does not in and of itself mean that it's going to potentially impact the results of an election.
Also, then, you were talking about how we can protect parliamentarians.
Again, during the writ period, there were briefings to the political parties. I think there are probably recommendations of how those can continue to be strengthened, because it is part of the protocol: How can those briefings continue? Then, I think, as I mentioned, there are a lot of resources available for parliamentarians to actually report any activity they see and get advice on what's there.
I think I would finish on that one by saying that our motivator and our mandate is to understand that information environment not only to protect parliamentarians but also so Canadians writ large can understand that information environment, because there are a lot of people in Canada who may be impacted.
Perhaps I'll stop there.