Thanks for that.
My only response was going to be that we're in agreement. We both agree victims, especially in the cyberbullying context, need to have recourse and need to have appropriate tools.
My only point in raising the issue was that victims of privacy breaches are of all ages and from all different walks of life. In fact in many instances these happen while people are blissfully unaware of what is taking place.
I would argue that, in the context of this bill, given that cyberbullying contains what is very clearly a significant privacy element, we shouldn't be killing privacy in order to save it, from a cyberbullying perspective. There are better ways to address what at the end of the day are a couple of very specific kinds of concerns at a time when frankly there's a fair amount of agreement on a lot of the provisions found in the bill.