What do we do to ensure that the privacy of Canadians remains paramount? Like Mr. Rochon, most of our work, as I said, is directed overseas, and it's part of Canadian operations abroad.
Where we do deal with Canadians is on our counter-intelligence program, but there it really has to be restricted to something that directly affects the security of National Defence or the CAF, so it has to deal with our employees, Canadian Armed Forces personnel, our property assets, and whatnot.
In circumstances where there is a nexus to that, we generally work with partners in law enforcement and national security. The mandate of our counter-intelligence unit is very focused. It can investigate, but it is not a law enforcement agency in its own right, so generally, those circumstances are ones where we are working in co-operation with law enforcement agencies or other partners, and their rules apply.
As you said at the beginning, SCISA doesn't actually change our ability to collect information. It doesn't change the mandate under which we can use that information. All it does is provide a very useful framework to move that information between departments when it seems like that might be necessary. The protections in place are all the usual protections in terms of the charter, the Criminal Code, and the protections that are in place within the various mandates of organizations like the RCMP, CSIS, and whatnot.