Sure.
First of all, in terms of any contact we would have with...I'm going to call them a service recipient, in section 241, the confidentiality provisions would prevent us from going to the service recipient and saying that we've had a look at your service provider and changed the characterization. So we'd be prevented from doing that.
The other question that I sort of want to address is to make a distinction between contracts between two parties and the impact those contracts have on the tax regime in terms of the tax effects those have. The distinction I want to make there is, if the person who's providing the service is a corporation, then we don't effectively say they don't have a corporation anymore, because in law they do have a corporation. So in terms of us going back to the service recipient and saying they have to contribute EI and CPP for this person, that's not the way the law works.
If they were not incorporated, there may be an issue where that is something we would have to look at from an audit perspective, but we can't legally change the effect of what is in place. And if they do have a corporation then--