I think the deputy covered it fairly well. The other thing to remember here and at all times is that the underlying principle of PIPEDA is openness. In any circumstance, if there are any Canadians ever concerned with how their information is being used by a private sector organization, this overlies everything there is in this provision.
Canadians have to be given full access to their information. They have to be able to assess its accuracy and corrections have to be made, so that if Canadians are ever concerned at any time, it's the ultimate oversight.
PIPEDA is designed to give Canadians that authority for themselves so they can go and ask any organization that has their information to see what information they have and to share its accuracy. If they don't get that information, they can go to the Privacy Commissioner, make a complaint, and the commissioner can go forward.