Simply to say, Mr. Chair, that the government doesn't support this. We believe the recklessness standard is the appropriate standard.
We heard a number of examples from witnesses, including those who were connected to victims, about the recklessness standard. On behalf of UNICEF, a hypothetical is put forward that a person would loan his friend his laptop computer on which he had stored intimate images of his girlfriend. He would tell that individual, “Don't look at those photos, don't do anything with them,” and then the case that he hypothesized was that the individual who had received the use of the laptop computer would then look at the pictures, contrary to the instructions, and distribute the images. That was the example that UNICEF gave as their concern about how it might ensnare young people.
Frankly, we think that is a very clear example of the kind of thing that we're trying to protect here. Recklessness is a well-established mental state in criminal law. We don't believe it criminalizes careless, inadvertent, or negligent behaviour, and as one of our witnesses said, he holds his 10-year-old son to the recklessness standard on a regular basis and he thinks that's appropriate.
On that basis, Mr. Chair, in order to protect the rights of those whose images are distributed on the Internet, we will not be supporting this amendment.