What we find is that you have to take the general public, and because it's so different in terms of age of interest, it's fragmented. But certainly, yes, there would be things for the general public. In schools, for example, we make some information available now on PIPEDA, in conjunction with the provincial commissioners, in a discretionary fashion because this is a provincial jurisdiction.
Many of the privacy laws across Canada resemble each other. That's another kind of education we could do. We could do more public education for seniors in terms of the use of their social insurance number, and on issues of privacy in getting some of their pensions. These are programs....
We have regional outreach initiatives and we are now cooperating with our colleagues in the Maritimes and in the prairie provinces. We're doing this under PIPEDA because we have a specific mandate for it. Again, issues like electronic driver's licences, which are Privacy Act issues, also concern the commissioner in B.C. and the commissioner in Quebec; there again, we could undertake joint efforts, but we confine them to PIPEDA.