This is a correction. There are 19,000 impacted Canadians, not 8,000. Our core assets, our core consumer credit information, was not impacted nor affected, because it was not hacked. The reason the number is 18,000 to 19,000 is that these were individuals who had purchased a product online with their payment card processing with the U.S. that transaction. Our core commercial and consumer database was not affected at all. No other database outside of that U.S. consumer portal was.
We worked with the Office of the Privacy Commissioner to notify everybody in writing to make sure they were all advised. We didn't want to call or email because that's susceptible to phishing scams and people calling vulnerable people, elderly and youth. It was the best course of action to write to each Canadian. Maybe Antonietta can describe some of the consumer relations aspects to your question.