One of the reasons I'm so excited about the approach Canada took was that you guys did more rounds of citizen assemblies than anyone else in the world did. You actually had conversations. Groups of Canadians went and argued about trade-offs on how to approach the Internet. This is what came out, other than the hate speech attachments that have been added on at the end. As a result, I think the bill overall is pretty resilient. It addresses a bunch of core things that need to be addressed.
The place where I would encourage you guys to be a little more open-minded or to do a little more future-proofing would be to ensure that the concept of what is a social platform is able to evolve. For example, virtual reality is easy to laugh at right now. If you go walk around Meta Horizon Worlds, which is Facebook's virtual reality space, it's overwhelmingly full of people under the age of 12. Age assurance is important for that reason. Those who talk to AI chatbots are overwhelmingly under the age of 18.
Think a little more expansively about what it means to be social, because children are starting to say.... Games are another space that is effectively social networks. As long as you're thinking a little bit more expansively about what's under the tent, the structure overall, and saying that we need to have a proactive duty of care and we need to care about transparency and these issues, that is what's important.