Mr. Masse, I don't envy the predicament you're in. In fact, the predicament you're in is a microcosm of the whole public who's interested in the regulation of artificial intelligence.
It was quite clear from the minister's statement that there were amendments. We haven't seen the amendments on AIDA. All we have right now is the letter of the minister, which describes in a very amorphous, open-ended form what the first focus of the government's going to be, but it's quite clear that there's no definition of what the factors are for what will be “high-impact”, and there's no criteria for future systems.
The reality is that we still have no idea. What really concerns me is that, at the last minute—you know, even if it's next week—we're going to get draft amendments, and those amendments are probably only going to be half of the amendments, because they're probably only going to relate to the pieces that were in the minister's letter. Everything else is going to be, I think, saved for clause-by-clause.
When you look at the work that's gone on around the world trying to come up with an appropriate regulatory framework, it has taken years. The British have really studied this issue and, as Ms. Denham said, had taken the view that what's needed is a hub and spoke, decentralized regulatory framework.
The committee may get amendments, and you're going to get a couple of weeks to review something that should have taken a year or years to evaluate. Also we're in the process of still finding out what the Europeans are doing and exactly what the U.S. Congress is going to do. We are making a big mistake, I believe, if we think that we can get dropped amendments, do a thorough analysis of them and make policy for the country that's going to affect jobs, the protection of the public and innovation for decades.
In my view, whatever comes out is not going to give this committee enough time to study it, and my strong recommendation would be to step back. The government's already said that it's going to take two years to do the regulations. They cannot go ahead with this part. Do the study and introduce a proper bill. We won't lose any time, but we'll get something that's thought through and debated by the public and Parliament.