Thank you, Mr. Chair.
This has been fascinating, as has been the testimony on the whole thing.
Dr. Guilmain, you have two Ph.D.s, as I understand it. You've pretty much earned the “Dr.” You have a very impressive background.
You seem to be getting all the popular questions here. I'd like to talk to you about two things. One is the issue of consent, which we have raised before. I've raised this in the committee before with other witnesses—the famous thing that happened with Zoom in the summer. I know from your résumé that you seem to have done some work in the past for Meta.
This is from section 15.2 of Zoom's consent clause on privacy that we all click—and even most lawyers click, too—without actually reading most of it. It says, “You agree that Zoom may modify, delete, and make additions to its guides, statements, policies, and notices, with or without notice to you, and for similar guides, statements, policies, and notices applicable to your use of the Services by posting an updated version on the applicable webpage.”
To me, that doesn't sound like consent. It sounds like it's changing the terms without your consent. Is there anything in this bill that prohibits that practice?