Thank you, Mr. Chair. By the way, your French was excellent earlier.
Given my fellow member's wonderful idea, I'd like Mr. Shull to get back to the committee in writing with the answers to three questions.
First, can a cyber-attack be considered a war crime?
Second, what type of response might we expect if a NATO country were the target of a major cyber-attack? Would it be considered an attack against NATO? Would NATO be at war?
This third one is pretty broad. Mr. Wark, earlier you mentioned certain recommendations you would like to see in the report.
Mr. Shull, are there recommendations you would like the committee to include in its report?
Mr. Wark, this one is for you. It ties in with my last question about disinformation, which I consider to be extremely dangerous. It's all over the place right now. I used to be a school principal, so young people and education come to mind. Schools need to work on prevention to help young people distinguish between real information and fake information.
Prevention aside, how much of the responsibility falls on the media and how much rests with us, as elected officials?