I think one of the challenges that we're seeing is the amplification of social media around involvement in criminal investigations. Generally speaking, in the majority of investigations that we now touch, whether it be a low-threshold crime, a property crime, a violent crime or exploitation, there is some form of digital entity tied to it.
The capacity for us as a national police service, the capacity for our partners and our police of jurisdiction, is that it has changed from what used to be the fundamental investigation, which was in a neighbourhood or was in a schoolyard, etc.
What we're seeing, particularly in this instance, are foreign actors who are using and amplifying social media to target Canadian citizens and/or citizens who are living from abroad in our country. That presents a significant challenge. We don't monitor social media. We obviously use it as an investigative tool or capacity, but when you look at all the various social media platforms, the reality is that the amplification of social media in criminal investigations is impacting everything we do, every single day.