In terms of contactless payments, we've undergone certification. So MasterCard, Visa, and even Interac have a rigorous process to go through that.
So from a device side, whether it's us or Samsung or anyone else, they go through a horrendous—I won't go any further—process to make sure that the device can't be hacked for contactless.
As a company that also provides its back office to companies like EnStream, we haven't announced yet, but we just received Visa certification. It's just as rigorous, and PCI certification, to go through that. We're all about security. We run government email systems and whatnot, and we're very impressed by what we've seen to date. It hasn't been an easy process. It has taken us months and months to go through that. So what we're seeing in contactless, we're quite impressed.
In terms of what you're hearing in the news of the breaches and stuff like that, I'm not saying they don't happen in Canada, but a lot of them are in markets where I don't think they're as advanced as what we've done in Canada, where we offer chip and PIN.
If you look at the U.S. market with Target, there are some things that are basic in the Canadian market or the U.K. market. If you notice, a lot of the major things—Neiman Marcus—are all happening in the U.S., where they still haven't moved forward with chip and PIN.
So I'm not going to say we're not going to be attacked or whatever, but I think we've done a good job in Canada on the payment side. I think the networks have all done a good job in terms of certifying each piece of the value chain.