Sure. The level of damage that I would address is confusion if we don't align them—confusion for Quebeckers, primarily, if we end up with some different standards. This actually applies elsewhere than the categories of de-identified information. Anonymized information is the main focus. It just makes sense to align across the country.
There are two points. I mean, really, I guess I can describe it by “two points”.
Data is collected by primarily national cross-Canada organizations intermingling the data. Are we going to come up with some rules that just somehow hive off Quebec data for these cross-nationals? That's not going to happen. It's going to be intermingled. Yes, there are possible systems that could do it and put in rules, but it doesn't make sense. I'll rephrase that. Organizations will not want to have to come up with a separate category of information for Quebec, different from the rest of the country. It's not exceptional to basically have the same rules apply. I'm talking about anonymized information.
The other thing is that I have spent a lot of my career advising marketers. I know that they don't like to say, “Well, actually, our higher standard rules apply just to Quebec residents.” How will that happen? It's not going to happen. You're going to have those companies saying, “No, we're going to the highest standard.”
Thirdly, I will say that I think Law 25 is going to inform privacy standards across the country de facto, and it is informing this committee and what we're doing here. That, hopefully—