I don't think we've heard anything about what is going on in the background or between these organizations, and I don't think we are likely to hear about it. That's one of the problems. If there were oversight and accountability and we could actually get a line of sight into what was going on, if they had an obligation to publish in the Canada Gazette all the information-sharing agreements and the magnitude of them, and if they had to report in Parliament every year—as is required for wiretap warrants, for example—then we would have some insight, but as a lawyer, when I look at this and read the statute, I wonder what could go on in here. I think that a whole lot of mischief could go on within the ambit of this statute. I think we need to make sure we're putting appropriate fences around that information.
As I said in my comments, our information and our privacy within government has actually been protected by the existence of those silos, and when it comes to these most intrusive institutions of government, those silos have been broken down.