I think the committee would say that it's encouraging that CSIS and its director are reaching out to engage more openly—giving keynote speeches, explaining the landscape, explaining the risks, and the magnitude of some of these threats and the magnitude of the opportunity to get it better for Canadians: protecting their rights, for example.
In our 2019 report, however, we also are very open and very transparent and objective. The committee insisted on putting in the areas where we're falling short in engaging with Canadians and where we're falling short in engaging with provinces, universities and institutions to give them more information about what is happening. That is rife, at the back end of our foreign interference review chapter in the 2019 report, a copy of which I hope you have. I think we've been very transparent and objective in pointing this out.