Again, this is not knowing what the initial service agreement was with the individual. When the information was actually collected, when the account for your four-year-old was first generated they had to tell you in plain language, which Bill C-27 will require, “This is what we're going to do with your information, are you comfortable with that?”
First of all, it's a four-year-old, which means you're making that determination. I'm sure your four-year-old is probably very clever, but they probably wouldn't meet the capability tests struck by the Supreme Court to make determinations on their own. You would be making that determination to say that you are willing to hand over this information.
There's guidance on that, in terms of what then occurs. It would be very much determined by what you said yes to. They could come back to you to say, “It looks you might be in a household that accompanies a four-year-old. I bet you probably really like PAW Patrol. Maybe you should watch or buy more of it.” It would depend on what you originally consented to.