It is, absolutely. In fact, that is something I said with the National Post. One of the concerns we have is that when ransomware is deployed against a victim such as a critical infrastructure provider, because of the way technology is merging together, it means that to defend themselves, they take all of their technology offline. They isolate and shut down to take protective measures.
Publicly, we saw Colonial do that. They took their pipeline operations offline so that they could get back control of their infrastructure. Something that we highlight in the national cyber-threat assessment is that we need to be taking this very seriously. Ransomware is the number one threat facing Canada and Canadians. That includes critical infrastructure, for the exact reason that we say. We were all hoping, in the cybersecurity industry, that we wouldn't see something like the Colonial pipeline, but it is the first of many.