We were very concerned, as I said, when Bonnie and I were first getting to know each other and developing our working relationship, about how the media was portraying young women. When you look at the current music videos and see younger and younger women who are more and more scantily clad, and that young girls are emulating these moves and these behaviours and those sorts of things, it's very concerning because we see people are getting into situations that are not readily apparent.
I had a call from one woman who had engaged in a sexual interaction with someone online, and then when that person referred to the video she didn't realize that her web cam, if video goes out on it, could video capture. A lot of this is that parents, women, and girls, are unaware at how quickly a photo could be taken and transmitted. Very sadly, that led to the two young women who committed suicide as a result of the bullying that happened around that, and the bullying that continues to happen.
When the father of Rehtaeh Parsons went on Facebook.... You know, he's getting comments a year later that are absolutely despicable. That kind of bullying simply doesn't let up. It happens even to our public figures. It happens to ordinary citizens.
That's one thing that we really see as one of the dangers—