I must say I think we are already part of the solution. As I've mentioned, since I've been here, I've seen almost on a weekly basis a number of acknowledgements from law enforcement saying how our information has helped them. However, to your point, I think it is very much a balance of what Canadians expect of us in terms of respecting their privacy rights, the Charter of Rights in terms of what we collect, and also having sufficient information to be able to administer our anti-money laundering and our anti-terrorist financing regime. From that perspective, I think there is a sweet spot that we need to find, and I do feel that we need to keep looking at that.
In terms of sharing information amongst other federal governments, we do share currently within the legislation in certain areas. Again, I believe we need to take a look at who shares what. Part of the reason FINTRAC was created was that a lot of these transactions that we do get may not be required for disclosures, so it is important we protect that information. It is important that we guard that.
The Office of the Privacy Commissioner comes every two years. We're the only federal government agency that actually has a review every two years. I think it's important that we maintain that for public trust. Always, the more information you have, the better you can do, but we really also must maintain the Charter of Rights and public trust.