That's both an important and difficult question. First of all, most people don't know that a lot of information is going off to the States. We got some publicity when the Office of the Privacy Commissioner pointed out that some of this was happening, and as I mentioned, in the B.C. context, there was lots of discussion on this when the possibilities existed that Americans could get access to the health records of British Columbians because we were outsourcing them to a subsidiary.
So they tried to put in the B.C. legislation dealing with this something to try to control to some degree the outflow. That is, if they contract out to a company, the company has to keep its records in British Columbia. At the end of the day, it wasn't clear, from either the Office of the Privacy Commissioner or the legislators, whether or not that was a foolproof way of preventing the U.S. parent company from getting access. The company within B.C., if they were going to do this thing, would have to sign agreements that they would not allow access to the Americans, they would not do this and they would not do that.
It's not clear, when you have control over information sitting in a database, whether or not it's been restricted so that the parent company can't get access. But that's the best you can do, unless you don't allow any outsourcing and it's all maintained by the government in Canada, assuming that the government doesn't outsource to companies for that purpose.
But it is a difficult process, and it will be one that's increasingly difficult, because more and more information by Canadians will go to the States by default. You'll have a credit card company; you'll make purchases. Who knows where they keep it?