I'm not trying to give you ammunition to ask for even more funds, but I suspect that there's a lot of online activity and a lot of data being collected, and I suspect that it would be very challenging to try to monitor and detect any breaches of the obligations that would be in Bill C-27. With respect, I think you have your work cut out for you in the future. I don't envy you that, but I appreciate the work that will be undertaken.
Maybe I'll leave it there for the moment on that.
I have another question or two. On the flip side of this—and I think my colleague Mr. Van Bynen asked some questions about this—what are the risks in going too far? By “going too far”, I mean are there risks within this legislation and this debate we're having, such that we could go a step or two too far and impede all of the positive benefits Canadians are getting out of the use of these online tools?
The data that's collected has enhanced our lives in a lot of different ways. There's a sense in which there's that balancing act between innovation and privacy, which you've already talked about. I guess I want to know specifically whether you see any risks in going too far. We really have been talking from the other side, about not going far enough on privacy rights. If we go too far, we might also stifle innovation. Would you agree with that, and are there any risks to that?