Thank you, Chair.
I want to ask a couple of questions of Meta, and I want to start with Ms. Curran.
I think Canadians are watching this hearing with a lot of interest, given the gravity of what is before us, and I think they'd be very concerned with the unparliamentary language they just heard.
I want to pick up on a point that Mr. Ste-Marie made around the Online News Act. There was a very strong article in the Globe and Mail over the weekend—in which Ms. Quaid was quoted—about the kinds of fraud being seen online, the kinds of protections Canadians should be expecting and the kinds of measures they can take around the all-of-government and all-of-society approach. A colleague of mine just tried to share that article on Facebook platforms and received the following response: “In response to Canadian government legislation, news content can't be shared.”
This is an article that could help millions of Canadians—if they had access to this article through your platforms—respond to the very things that are the subject of this study. Today, could you commit to ensuring that that one Globe and Mail cover article from Saturday in which Ms. Quaid is quoted is not blocked for Facebook and Instagram users?