Sure, thank you for the question.
What we find is that Europol, for example, is an organization that is obviously a law enforcement body, but it's one that is very, very connected with their equivalent in Asia. They have touch points in Canada as well. One of the things they do differently is they publicize a lot of their successes. One of the latest ones has been within the airline industry where there was a tremendous amount of fraud based on identity theft. Those identities were used by people to just fly around the world for millions of dollars' worth of value, but more importantly, with the intrinsic risk of effectively flying these unknown individuals with unknown intentions around the world. That particular success was widely publicized recently, and they said that they are focused just as much on every other industry that is thusly suffering. The reason I mention this one is obviously that it has a particular touch point with our topic of interest.
One of the things they're doing is obviously communicating things. One of the things they're also doing very well is collaborating and exchanging information, so not just saying that they are equally concerned about specific types of crime, but they're actually exchanging behavioural information and transactional data for suspected parties. They do so across a number of layers. For example, we're obviously particularly concerned with corporate identity fraud. Corporate identity fraud is, in many cases, what begins this chain of abuse of trust that leads to personal identity fraud. A lot of this corporate identity fraud, of course, is a concern to corporations. They have an education program that ensures that organizations understand what the impacts are to their reputations, their finances, etc., so they get a lot of support from organizations in Europe in particular.