Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you to all of the officials who are here today.
I'm going to start with the deputy minister for public safety on the cyberbullying campaign.
Could you talk a little bit about what we've done so far. It's something that I fully support. I actually did an announcement for phase two of this back in September at a local grade 7 and grade 8 school in my own riding. I'm going to ask you to elaborate on this, but it was the introduction of an interactive campaign so that students or youth could actually log on—or someone my age if we wanted to see what it was all about—and based on what you typed in, the results came back with the person on the screen either smiling and happy with the comments that someone might have typed on the screen versus something that someone typed in that made them feel uncomfortable or sad.
It was quite an extraordinary thing to see. It was interesting to also witness the students who were present for that announcement because they were smiling at parts of it, and in the other parts when they're seeing what the results were on the screen it was quite interesting to see how they reacted, as well.
I'm just wondering if you could talk a little bit about that and where we are on that, and perhaps even how well used that website has been to date.