I think the challenge I face here is really from a cybersecurity perspective. My advice would really be to the potential victims and how to protect things, protect themselves and try to keep themselves from getting into that situation, and really thinking before you share information. Once it's on the Internet, it's there forever. How are you sharing it? What apps are you using? The example of face apps that estimate someone's age was used, but similarly there is photo sharing, etc., as well, and the need not to place oneself in a position where you're vulnerable to that type of harm.
The next would be to get Canadians thinking about how they are using the technology base and asking if they really understand the harms they can get themselves into by slowly being drawn in. Then it's about minimizing the harms and dealing with them.
I'm just not positioned well to talk about the different tools that are placed, because that wouldn't be something that we would be doing from a cybersecurity perspective.
It's certainly something that, as a citizen, I would love to see dealt with harshly and quickly, and that it be resolved, but it's not something that we're in a position to really talk about from a cybersecurity perspective.