And the public has every right to expect that and want it. I can tell you, Mr. Tilson, that the treasury department has issued guidelines to departments on what is known as “breach notification”, if there is an inadvertent—or advertent, in the very rare case—release of information, on what to do and making sure it is remedied. It's a big problem, not just within the federal sphere.
I remember walking down the street in Niagara Falls, and somebody told me he was just checking over my report card. When they closed my high school, they left all the report cards, attendance records—they left everything for the last 60 years—and I guess it was just open season for anybody who wanted to go into the building to check on it.
I'm pleased that there are Treasury Board guidelines on this, because as you point out, it's a huge problem, or it can be, when it takes place. We hear every so often about sometimes millions of documents that somehow get released on a disc that was inadvertently placed somewhere. I think there are very strict guidelines in this country, but if you have any recommendations with respect to that, we'd be very interested.