Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to our witnesses here today.
I'm somewhat concerned about this bad bill before us today.
With Bill C-11, the Government of Canada had an opportunity to enshrine the fundamental right to privacy for children, to define what a minor is, to define perhaps an age of consent and do a whole bunch of stuff to ensure that children were protected. That bill died on the Order Paper.
Then, we had Bill C-27 when this Parliament opened up again. The minister again had an opportunity to enshrine the fundamental right for children to protect their privacy in some of the actions they may take online. Then the government had the opportunity to define what sensitive information is—likely in the context of a child. They had an opportunity to define what a socially beneficial purpose was in the context of a child.
The minister came before us a few weeks ago. He said, “I have this bill. It's going to do so much work to protect children, but we have to amend it.” Then we had to put a motion forward to get a copy of those amendments. We're here today. I am not going to relent on this until we have more clarification and I hear from as many witnesses as possible to ensure that children's rights are protected.
My question is open-ended. I'll start with you, Mr. Geist. What clauses of the bill do you believe need to be amended to ensure that a child's fundamental right to privacy and their online actions are not used in a way that will compromise them as adults, or at a future period of time in their life?