Yes.
In my resume, I mention, among others, the privacy principles related to the Beyond the Border Accord with the United States. That accord involves some 30 individual agreements, most of which aim to share information with the United States under certain programs. We have known, since the Iacobucci and Major inquiries, that this kind of information sharing has to be regulated.
Before any specific agreements on information sharing are concluded with the United States, it was deemed useful to establish privacy principles that would govern that whole accord. The agreement, which I negotiated with colleagues from the Department of Public Safety and American colleagues, essentially aims to harmonize the two countries' privacy principles and, on the Canadian side, to implement the recommendations of the Major inquiry, which established certain rules in terms of information sharing.