I see accountability as being a legal principle and not a technological one, and that speaks to the accountability of the information that gets collected.
In terms of ensuring that both public and private are using best of breed security, for example, I think we've seen some of the mechanisms, at least in the public sector where we can try to do that, with the government's efforts to try to embrace different cloud computing services. It's a good illustration of how the government has recognized that cloud may offer certain concerns around where the data is stored and those kinds of localization issues, but it also may offer, depending on the provider, some of the best security mechanisms with regard to where that data's being stored. So how do you get the benefits of that, while at the same time creating some of the safeguards that may be necessary? We've seen some efforts in that regard.
Some of that comes down to identifying different kinds of data or perhaps, especially at the federal government level, different kinds of rules for different kinds of data. I think it does require an openness to blurring those lines sometimes, within the context of recognizing that we still need to ensure that Canadian rules are applicable.