Mr. Rogers, in your presentation, you're looking at cyber-threats to Canada's democratic process. We just had Aggregate IQ, a Canadian-based company, busily interfering with the U.K. Brexit vote and, we believe, also the American presidential vote which President Trump won.
They were using stolen data. It was Facebook's stolen data. Are they captured in what you investigate? Or are you only outward-looking? If they're sitting here in Canada and they're interfering with other people, we'd be foolish to believe that tomorrow they're not going to turn around and interfere with their own. Are there limits on what you can investigate? I'm quite bothered that we have a Canadian entity actively interfering and thumbing their nose at our committee as they do it.