Mr. MacGregor, I wouldn't claim to be an expert on platform regulation. For many of the people I work with at the Centre for International Governance Innovation, that's their kool-aid, and I'm sure they would be happy to come and talk to you about that at some point.
I'll come back to your question about the rapid response mechanism, and I'll say that it's probably mistitled. I think the idea was it was going to be a rapid detection mechanism, but maybe that sounded a little too un-Canadian when it was created. I think I would take to heart many of Mr. Scott's comments in terms of a guide, particularly in terms of requiring these social media platforms to be much more transparent and much more responsible.
I would also add to that—and this, maybe, just reflects my own age—that we did this to ourselves. No one required us to sign up to YouTube, Instagram, etc., and, you know, drink from those fountains. I think Canadians have to exercise some degree of responsibility themselves in terms of how they intersect with social media platforms. There's an education component to that. There may be a regulation component to it, but at the end of the day, in a democratic society, it comes down to our being able to exercise good judgment in that regard.
I think there's a lot that can be done, and this is why I'm very keen on a model like the Swedish Psychological Defence Agency—which perhaps our other guest knows more about than I do—that could combine a detection capacity and use intelligence resources and so on alongside a public-facing organization that could really talk to and try to educate Canadians.