Thank you, Mr. Chair.
My first intervention is the challenge of what we do next, because what I think you have demonstrated today is that it's like the argument that we're going to consult you on Bill C-27, and we will fix it sometime on copyright, and we will fix it somehow after we pass Bill C-27. That is not sufficient for the NDP. It's clear to us that you can do both of those things. Alternatively, we either send this to regulatory oblivion—that's really what happens—or dismantle what we have here.
I'm looking at an alternative where we view it through the lens of almost like national security. Perhaps we even have a standing committee of Parliament and the Senate that looks at this over all the different jurisdictions, because copyright is proving that it's just outside this particular bill in terms of the technicality of it, but the reality is that it encompasses everything you have been saying and doing here in a much more wholesome way than in many other industries.
I have one quick question to go across the table here about an AI commissioner. Should the commissioner be independent and able to fine the abuse of artificial intelligence if that is part of the law?
Maybe we can start with ACTRA and go across.