In terms of the law you're reviewing right now, we have a mandate to deal with spam. I thank our lucky stars that most of the population hasn't figured that one out, because we could be drowning in spam—not spam, but in complaints. We have had a couple of spam-related complaints.
The recommendations of the task force would have essentially augmented some of our powers to deal with spam. The true spammers are not organizations with whom we can enter into a dialogue in the way we can with the banks or small business or whatever, because they're not interested in complying with laws. So it would be very difficult for us.
We can deal with your average, unsolicited e-mail that you may get from a large corporation with which you may or may not have a relationship, but the true spam issue is something that essentially can't be dealt with under privacy legislation. It is something for the criminal law or for the Competition Bureau when dealing with misleading advertising and all of that stuff, with heavy criminal penalties. I think that's the only way we're ever going to come to grips with spam.