Thank you for the question.
We have taken a number of measures to reduce, for example, the number of connection points to the Internet. This is across the government. We have in fact streamlined and solidified those connecting points. We have also established a greater number of monitors that are essentially technical monitors that allow us to detect any elements of penetration or attempts at doing so.
In terms of the databases that hold the personal, individual information of citizens, those are kept well away from Internet access points. They are in fact quite layered within very structured networks, if I can put it that way, and databases. Very few people have access to them. There are no interfaces between those databases and the public-facing Internet. They are completely.... I mean, we talk about firewalls, but these are kind of lead walls. They really are not connected. There are very limited access points.