Absolutely. As a consumer who receives large volumes of spam, certainly I've had a personal interest in being able to go after that, but in turn, if my network provider and my email provider had the tools to go forward on my behalf, or on behalf of fellow consumers using their domains, I certainly think that would be a valuable tool. We did see under CAN-SPAM that organizations like Facebook have effectively used CAN-SPAM on their own to protect their network and protect their users. In fact, they did have a settlement against a gentleman in Montreal that resulted in, I believe, a $1-billion violation under the California anti-spam act and CAN-SPAM, which was later upheld by the Quebec courts, because his initial response was that if he lived in Canada, CAN-SPAM didn't apply. Then they went after him civilly and were able to get the Quebec courts to honour that judgment.
On October 24th, 2017. See this statement in context.