What I was referring to there is in our brief, and again I apologize for not getting it in sooner. There was a case in Toronto where the police were looking to get information. I think it was a homicide investigation. The issue the ISP raised was that the cost of cooperating with law enforcement would be an unreasonable financial burden. It's the only example I know of where the costs were actually discussed.
The court heard evidence on the complete annual cost for companies to comply with production orders--orders from the police to get information. The complete annual cost was $660,000. The court had a forensic auditor look at those numbers, and they found that the expenditure was 0.0087% of Telus' operating revenue and 0.012% of their net income for one year. So the forensic auditor said it was not really a material amount. When you look at the profit compared to the cost of cooperating with law enforcement, we're really talking about fairly minimal numbers.