You see, the answer is that CRA says it has contacted every taxpayer who was targeted. Well, that's fine, but at the same time, this ignores one specific problem. Canadian society is more like a partnership. A partnership means that we all pitch in. When there's fraud, we all lose.
I understand that these people who were defrauded did not lose any money. If the money from their tax returns went away, then it was refunded to these people. That's fine. However, if the government was defrauded of millions of dollars, then you and I lost on that. That's why all taxpayers lose in that fraud system. That's why we all should be informed of what happened.
We should be informed also of the mechanism that will be put in place by the CRA to correct that. With the current system, when you buy from H&R Block or UFile online, the contract says specifically that they are a worldwide corporation. They know that when you trade with them, you allow them to transfer your information. You have to understand that this information will go to other countries. It says in the licence that the information will go to other countries and that you recognize that these countries might offer you a lower protection than Canada does. They say in the contract that you accept that by buying their software.
You see, it's all in that—