Yes. Thanks. I'm happy to provide a response.
Again, coming back to my earlier points about who authorizes lists or who validates lists and then how those lists are made available to federal decision-makers in procurement, there has to be a regime that looks at that in terms of making a determination of the list holder and the process they use to verify and validate people on the lists.
Along with that regime comes that back-end piece you're speaking about, which is how each of the different groups or the Government of Canada is going to look at the enforcement component, whether that's through an audit that follows the contracting or whether that's ensuring the right criteria or conditions are met—again, by the list administrators—going forward.
Speaking more generally, I think that on some of these fraudulent activities, we're already seeing the legal action, the legal consequences, to Marc's point about self-identification—