I think the question is clear.
I'll refer you to the recent Federal Court decision of Justice Noël in the case involving CSIS. In a section of the decision, Justice Noël mentioned that, since the adoption of Bill C-51, CSIS is now obtaining information from the Canada Revenue Agency that previously required a warrant. At this time, CSIS is obtaining the information without a warrant because the Security of Canada Information Sharing Act makes this activity possible. That's what we see in practice. Some cases used to require warrants, but they don't anymore.
From a legal standpoint, to answer your question, the issue of whether the information sharing involves interests protected by the charter needs to be reviewed on an individual basis. Sometimes it will be the case, but not always. When it's the case, an analysis pursuant to the charter would be necessary. We would need to identify the protections and check whether a reasonable search can be conducted within the meaning of the charter. In addition, very often—I would say in most cases—the information will not involve interests protected by sections 7 and 8.