That's right. I issue a report and I make recommendations on whether there's been an infringement of legislation. We work with the respondents and say, “We want to bring you into compliance. Here is what we think you should do.” In many cases, I'm happy to say, the organizations will agree to our recommendations. They'll implement, and then we can say this was well founded and resolved, or conditionally resolved. That's the goal, unless it's not well founded. That even happened in the TikTok investigation, where they agreed to all our recommendations. That's a good-news story.
In some cases, there is no agreement, such as in the Pornhub investigation, where the organization refused—refused to require the express consent of all individuals whose intimate images are posted and refused to have a takedown mechanism that was at the level we felt would be user-friendly and quick enough. Then we have to take the matter to the Federal Court. It's different from an appeal in that we have to prove the case from the beginning, starting from scratch. Then the Federal Court will make its decision on whether there has been a breach or not. It can then be appealed all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada. That brings significant costs and delays to everyone—my office, the individuals affected and industry. It also delays the outcome.
In the case of Pornhub, it means there is no immediate enforceability of the order. If we had the ability to issue an order, the order would be made and then the information would be taken down. There could be an appeal afterwards, of course, and our decisions may be overturned, but in the meantime, Canadians would be protected. It would be the most protective approach. Right now we do not have that, and it's a gap.