Those considerations are certainly valid, particularly when we're dealing with sensitive information or data that could be personalized.
Again, however, I think we need to remember the role of copyright law. There's legislation for public and consumer safety outside of the Copyright Act. As one of the witnesses from the Intellectual Property Institute of Canada testified, public health and safety is not their area of expertise, nor is it the expertise of copyright policy.
Where those concerns exist, the government should take action to enact legislation that protects Canadians from dangerous products. However, I don't think the Copyright Act is the appropriate place to incorporate those considerations. What ends up happening is public interest, access to information, innovation and those types of concerns end up bearing the cost of it.
It's not the appropriate role for those types of policies.