Thank you very much, Ms. Lattanzio, for that opportune question, given that the MRA does play an important role in all of this.
The MRA is a federal criminal statute that places obligations on those who provide Internet service to the public, for example, access providers, content providers and hosts. It requires them to report to the C3P, the Canadian Centre for Child Protection, which runs the anonymous tip line, Cybertip.ca, if they're advised of an Internet address where there is child pornography that may be available to the public, or they're required to report to law enforcement if they have reasonable grounds to believe that the Internet service is being used to commit a child pornography offence. That is critically important. It also requires them to maintain the fleeting data for a period of 21 days [Technical difficulty—Editor] law enforcement a chance to access that.
Those are important measures in trying to combat a phenomenon that is happening quickly online. It tries to give law enforcement authorities, through the mandatory reporting obligation, some ability to act quickly. It's a critical part of the criminal structure in fighting this kind of crime, which we all believe is heinous and needs to be eradicated.