Thank you very much, all of you, for being here.
It's very interesting, and it's unfortunate that we have only two hours. I think we could have easily spent two days asking you all the questions.
One question I want to ask is a question I have asked of other agencies, but I think it's more pertinent with the agencies that you represent, because each one of you deals internationally. This question picks up on the question that Mr. Blaikie brought up about international sharing agreements.
Mr. Oliver, you quite rightly pointed out that it's very difficult to have an agreement with every single entity in a different country. For the other agencies, I think it's a little bit easier because they're dealing with one entity, but when you deal with another jurisdiction, there might be multiple layers of different agencies that you have to deal with.
When you are dealing with another country that you have a written sharing agreement with, what confidence do each of you have that the information that you share is confidential and that there's a robust regime or a repository as strong as ours to make sure that information is confidential, especially when you're dealing with a Canadian citizen?
The second question is, if you have a written sharing agreement with one entity or one jurisdiction, there may be another country that has a separate deal with them that we don't have. What guarantee do we have that the information that we have given to one country, with whom we have a written sharing agreement with, does not get passed on to another country, with whom that country may have an agreement?