Thank you for the question.
Yes, we would like things to remain, but I'll back up and qualify this.
As insurance brokers, we look to try to protect our clients. If there is a breach to any of our clients, we certainly want to make sure that they are well aware of it. British Columbia currently, I believe, has something that is very workable. What they're saying there is they want to be able to assess what the breach was, find out who was affected, make sure they contact those affected people, and learn about and mitigate any possibility of these breaches continuing in the future.
We find that to be a good common sense approach. Certainly if people's information has been breached, absolutely the insurance brokers across Canada want to make sure those people are made aware of the breach and are able to handle it in the most appropriate way.
We do not feel that it may be in the best interest to worry all of your clients if, for instance, you happen to have a rock thrown through the front window of your business and it sets off your alarm and there was absolutely no breach into your office. You wouldn't notify all those clients and unduly worry them. If there was an actual possibility that information got out, insurance brokers around Canada would want to make sure that those affected clients were definitely notified. We're very pro that.