First of all, let me clarify what type of information we're talking about. For example, when we're talking about ISPs, we're talking about customer name and address information. We're not talking about their Internet usage, we're not talking about what websites they've searched, or that sort of private information that would attract the necessity for us to obtain a warrant.
What we're talking about is saying to an ISP, or to a company or a gas station or a financial institution, that we're looking for so-and-so, and we're wondering if so-and-so is one of their customers, yes or no. That then allows us to go on a line of inquiry that may ultimately allow us to obtain the proper authorization to get the information for which we would require a warrant. What we find, though, is that some interpretations of the act are limiting some companies from actually telling us whether or not there is a customer there. We obviously then have a number of investigative steps we have to take when they don't allow us to get that information.
So for what we're looking for, we're talking about information that does not attract the section 8 charter protection. We're certainly not looking to read people's e-mails without warrant or go into their Internet usage without warrant. We would never ask for that. We don't intend to ask for that, and it's not the direction we're going in.