All I know is that the Privacy Commissioner of Canada had hired an organization to do the work. I had liaised with the assistant commissioner Denham in developing it, we rolled it out in Saskatchewan, there were a number of meetings with business organizations and small and medium-sized businesses, and we certainly received intelligence and input and feedback through that process. Then there was some issue, I think, between the consulting firm and the office that had hired them, and at some point I think the contract was terminated. I wasn't directly involved in that.
It was unfortunate, because it was an interesting exercise and helped to probe in a part of the country in which there isn't a provincial private sector privacy law and PIPEDA was the law that applied. It's important that it have traction in all parts of Canada, and we found lots of evidence—it was manifest—that there wasn't a great deal of traction in that one province, and I suspect not only in that one province.