That's a good question. It generated a great deal of discussion in the team that helped develop the bill.
First, we must establish that this issue is the reason for the two types of penalties. It's not the companies' fault if they fail in their efforts to investigate the people who control the shares in the company.
The second important aspect is the incorporation of other tools.
This is just one tool. What we've tried to do, across the overall approach to money laundering and terrorist financing, is to create a set of tools that can collaborate with each other, so among the tax authorities and the investigative bodies and the additional resources that have been placed there. You're right. We can't place too much burden on the corporation, because its full-time job is not to investigate, ultimately, who may be shareholders in their enterprise. Its full-time job is to run the company.
This is one more tool for competent authorities, amongst other things such as tax filing, tax investigations and financial authorities. We hope that it's an additional aspect of the overall effort, recognizing that it has limitations but that these can be made up for in other zones.