The audio was cutting out, sir, and I didn't hear everything, but I'll do my best to answer the parts that I did hear.
If there were monies coming in from an international organization or an individual internationally, and they were in sums of $10,000 or more, we would see that, because it would use the international transfer system. Those transactions are threshold transactions that would be reported to FINTRAC. If the transactions were coming into a crowdfunding platform, the crowdfunding platforms that I have researched so far all have fairly strong anti-money laundering, anti-terrorist financing compliance programs in place. They don't want to be misused. They have terms of reference, and as we saw with GoFundMe, if you're not managing your terms of reference, they will cut that page off. They will certainly be keeping an eye on that.
Any organization or individual who is setting up a GoFundMe page or any other type of crowdfunding page for nefarious purposes would nevertheless have a bank account if they're in Canada, so we would not only see the international transfer of threshold funds coming in; we would also have the bank keeping an eye on whether or not the bank account that was set up for this particular social cause, or whatever cause it was, was actually disbursing the money for the purposes for which it was set up. Otherwise, we would see suspicious transaction reports.