There's been a bit of a discussion too, and a disagreement between the two of you, insofar as the retention of data is concerned.
Mr. Kapoor, I would agree more with your particular perspective.
Mr. Mia, my question is more for you in relation to the examples that you brought up about Mr. Arar. Perhaps there may be others, and I'm going to defer to your expertise on this point.
We've already had the conversation about analytics and the results of human error when it comes to programming that might result in sloppiness and we've talked about the vastness of information that led to a false positive. If we didn't keep the data on which the poorly programmed analytics were run, how would we exonerate a person if the data were no longer there to run the correct analytics on?