Okay. I'll be briefer than usual.
Mr. Vickery, it was interesting to hear your discussion of a method that would work for voting that would be secure. Of course, here we're concerned about two possible kinds of vulnerability. One is the issue of foreign interference, of hacking. You explained how that risk is mitigated with the method that you've proposed.
There is another kind of risk, however, and that's MPs effectively giving up what is supposed to be their responsibility for voting. They might hand over the device you've discussed to a member of their staff or a member of the whip's staff. They might say, “I'm going on vacation for the next couple of days. Just vote the party line.” This sort of thing theoretically would involve the active co-operation of the member, but would still be something that would be very inappropriate. We'd want to make sure there was a system to prevent that from happening, because it's the responsibility of members to vote, to be seen to vote, and to vote themselves, whatever influences are taken into consideration.
Does your proposed method of a prescribed piece of technology do anything to address that possible risk of someone giving the device to somebody else to vote for them, forwarding email codes and those kinds of things?