Yes, I would echo what Ms. Owens has said.
To build on that, the work of the ombudsperson, from the perspective of online abuse and technological abuse, could perhaps play a role in educating the various actors within the system of specific types of trauma and other safety planning considerations that need to be put into place, particularly when we're talking about children.
One thing that we see as an organization, as an example, is that for victims of child sexual abuse material, the offenders know who they are, or they spend time trying to figure out who they are. There are safety considerations that need to be taken into account a little differently, because that imagery is living online. The ombudsperson could be very effective, I think, in terms of educating and pulling together information from various jurisdictions to help better inform all actors within the system of these types of challenges.