Thank you for your excellent question.
It touches somewhat on a major dilemma we are currently facing in cybersecurity: on the one hand, reporting can have value; but on the other, it represents risk for reputations or business processes.
I think Bill C‑26 tries to show the advantages of reporting. Indeed, one of the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security’s roles is to help a business in a given sector solve its problem when it reports. This also helps us to know what happened, develop indicators of compromise and quickly send information on an ad hoc basis to the entire sector and all sectors in Canada.
I think one of the very important aspects of the bill is that it will allow us to collect this information, help the victim and help the entire sector and other sectors in Canada benefit from it, as well as small and medium businesses, and even the entire Canadian economy.