Thank you for that.
One of the other things that occurred to me when I heard you explain that was that individuals may not be able to easily determine whether a violation of their privacy rights has happened. When you think about operating in a digital age, as we are today, you may suspect it, but I think it would put a lot of onus on an individual, and how would they have the capacity necessarily? As you said, the first-instance finding, in the model that was contemplated for this bill, would happen through the OPC, so allowing for an alternative track, I guess, for someone to pursue a private right of action, seems to me to put a lot of onus on them to have to investigate or know how to determine whether a violation has actually occurred.
Is that part of the challenge you see that would kind of weaken the overall approach if this were to pass?