Yes, we come to slightly different conclusions, but I will answer your question.
The public education mandate is not specifically spelled out in the Privacy Act, again in contradistinction to PIPEDA, a much more modern law. As a consequence of that, I believe that we don't really have the resources for a public education campaign or public education activities in terms of informing Canadians about their privacy rights vis-à-vis the government.
We don't, for example, have specific allotted resources to do research on national security and privacy issues, as we do under PIPEDA, with its specific contributions program that was written right into the law. I distribute grants every year so that people can do research into the impact of PIPEDA on their privacy. I think that would be very useful in terms of developing public policy.
That's the difference. It would make a big difference in terms of what we can do with the broader public.