Thank you very much for your question.
Perhaps I'll give a bit of context in terms of our role and the role of the commission.
A commission is completely independent. They run their information management and internal email. We provide support, systems and advice. At the end of a commission, effectively, we're handed those files in electronic and paper form, but there's not necessarily a lot of information about what's in the individual files. To actually know what's in them, we'd have to open them, go through them and make some determinations.
At a high level, what I can tell you is that, within the 152,000 documents you mentioned, there's a mix of four broad categories. There are the documents the Government of Canada provided. That can be a mix of cabinet confidences, top secret information, secret information and protected B information. That's about 31,000 unique files. In addition to that, there are 88,000 files that were productions from other parties. As you know, there were a number of parties with standing who submitted documents. These are the documents submitted by provinces, police services or independent citizens. Those are contained in there. In addition, there are the individual documents created by the commission itself. There are 22,000 files that we have determined were created by the commission itself. Then there are internal documents. Think of HR, finance and those internal administrative documents. It's about 11,000.
In keeping with what's been done in past commissions, there's a website created by the commission with the final report and the information that it deems the public should have access to. Just like any—