Thank you.
I have one other question related to this. I note that some other members on this committee have noted the number of cases that have been contested in the federal courts. Now, I think it's misleading to use that as a way of determining the volume of disputes there might be, given the fact that we're discussing here a new legislative framework. The old one in PIPEDA was 20 years old and didn't account for the digital age that we're in. It didn't account for many of the breaches in privacy that may happen more frequently throughout our economy today.
I think when you're introducing a new legislative framework that comes with the OPC having new powers and authorities, and you have an old legislative framework not suited for the age we're in, my impression would be that there could be a lot more volume of disputes that both the OPC and the tribunal might deal with in the future once we, hopefully, get through installing this new legislative framework.
Can you unpack that for us and whether you think that volume of disputes would likely increase in the future? Again, I could see a case to be made that if we think the volume is going to increase, which I suspect may be the case, then would we want all of those disputes to be going through a federal courts system rather than having a tribunal in place that significantly speeds up the process and gets to outcomes and increases trust and transparency in a system that is relatively new?