Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you for appearing today. It's interesting to see us in this different set-up, as opposed to in committee together.
I want to go back to what you said, Mr. McKay, in terms of the when, the if and the how.
It's difficult. As we all know, in the House of Commons, our emails are fairly semi-public at this stage. People crack the code all the time. There are millions of attacks daily upon the House of Commons. This particular APT31 attack was thwarted. Therefore, as it's been told to us, you were not informed.
How, in your opinion, should we go forward in terms of that when, if and how, when there are so many? How do you expect the House of Commons to move forward within such incredible complexity and that sheer number?