I'll start with the Asia-Pacific, and then maybe my colleague can continue with the Francophonie, and then we can come back to the others.
Asia Pacific Privacy Authorities, or APPA, was started by New Zealand, Australia, and Hong Kong, who have similar world standard legislation, to try to get some momentum going in terms of data protection in that area of the world. They have meetings about three times a year, and they share programs and they educate and they discuss how they deal with certain similar issues. Working meetings at APPA are very focused.
A couple of years ago, my B.C. colleague, Commissioner Loukidelis, and I were asked to join. We said yes, Canada is a Pacific nation, and increasingly we're looking toward the Pacific. I'd say we attend the meetings irregularly because of the cost and the time involved, but we have regular phone conversations with APPA and we communicate by e-mail on similar issues quite a bit, so there's quite a good rapport. We had a common youth privacy campaign together, where we took a video that had been made in Hong Kong and put it on our website and promoted it in Canada.
So that's APPA.