We have provided some caucuses on that point with a good explanation about mail communications, all the communications, and what is protected and what is not protected. I would be very pleased to send this to this committee, this particular documentation, but at the same time--and Madam O'Brien mentioned this--there are questions of responsibility and of what you intend to use for which purpose.
If you want to use those technologies to really, really do your day-to-day business, then you are completely avoiding the security measures we have in place at the House of Commons. That's why the committees and members of Parliament have to be cognizant of what is available, what is not available, and how you want to use this technology.
Whenever you are using PIN to PIN, you are using the cellular phone environment. How many of you call us and say, “Well, I'm on my cellular phone right now, so be careful on what you're telling me or what we're talking about”? PIN to PIN is exactly the same thing. If you believe that this technology could be the right one for you, then this is where you have to assess the risk of data technologies, but for me to tell you that using PIN to PIN using some software will be very secure, it's not...I can't tell you that. It's not.