I think it's critical that the Privacy Commissioner has order-making power. As I say, we have no indication here that we've seen any privacy commissioner with order-making power act anything other than sweetly reasonably. There is a question of will this not be heavy-handed, will organizations that make inadvertent mistakes be somehow characterized as bad players, etc.? This is simply not what we're seeing with privacy commissioners who have order-making powers across the country, who still have the ability to use moral suasion, advising best practice and all of the other range of educative tools that we would like, but nevertheless have something backing them up.
To explain to, in our case, British Columbians that your privacy rights are enforceable, I can tell you Canadians are stunned to find out that their statutory federal privacy rights are essentially incredibly difficult to enforce and require an exorbitant amount of resources to take you to an enforcement place.