With respect, Parliament has already done a review of the act and has delivered its views, and the government will be responding to those shortly. I think we need to get that process of reform under our belts before we look at new threats or new problems or new issues with respect to identity theft.
It is a very fast-moving area, and it is difficult to keep up sometimes with a phenomenon that literally.... This is a problem one gets generally with fraud issues more broadly; that there is constant innovation going on to try to find new ways to compromise people's identity and to use it for ill gain.
Right now, I think what we would like to do is get this next phase of the work completed and then address what the future issues would be that both Parliament and the government think are important.
I could list off, and I'm sure you could as well, a number of potential problems that are emerging. One of the problems with this area is needing to allow a certain amount time whereby we can see how these things settle out and determine the longer-term structural problems we need to address when faced with a highly innovative and constantly changing environment like this.
So as I said, right now I think the key priority is to get on with the government's own intentions to reform the act and to provide Canadians with more opportunities in that context to protect themselves.