Thank you very much for the question.
I think this is one of those big questions. It's the big messy challenge we are facing today. How do we create that whole-of-society response that I was mentioning?
First and foremost, we need leadership at the federal level where the federal government takes ownership in building a strategy that will impact other government departments in setting budgets, for example, that would include digital media literacy as a key budget objective.
We also need to map the field of digital media literacy in Canada. That has yet to be done. There are hundreds of organizations doing this work on the ground, including MediaSmarts. We need to better understand what those are, what they are doing and how we can work together.
That also informs my comment about budget. We need to create funding for this work that doesn't pit these civil society organizations in competition with one another, but allows us to work together in synergy to combat these various issues, which include the variety of online harms that we've all been talking about as well as ideologically motivated violent extremism.
We see the education sector as being a player in that but not the only player. We see regulation as being very pivotal and important but not the only solution. It is the same for platform responsibilities and for technological design in that as well. That is part of the solution here but not the only approach.
Thank you very much.