Thank you for the question.
My view is that these generic briefings or emails we receive that tell us not to open an obvious phishing scam by email, and there's that “phishing” button.... I have never used that button in 20 years of using Outlook, so I can't tell you what it does. I just know not to open the email. It's obvious to me.
I know my colleagues here. I know that Mrs. Kusie is very involved with Cuban exiles who are fighting for freedom in Cuba. I know that Ms. Sgro shares my interest in a free Iran and she leads one of the different parliamentary groups. When there are specific attacks on us by foreign governments or foreign groups, we should be told in the moment, instead of getting these generic quarterly briefs or as they happen when there's a phishing attack on Parliament Hill on our emails. That's not useful.
I will praise one group: the ParlVoyage people, who give us the burner phones and inform us on what to do and on the security-level threats. When I travelled to Iraq last year with a parliamentary delegation, they were excellent. They told us exactly what was reasonable, what was unreasonable and how to be digitally secure as you're travelling through different airports.
Outside of that, like I said, nobody from CSIS, CSE or any of the other alphabet soup agencies has come to talk to me, except for the FBI, to tell me and to explain to me what I could do to be safer and to provide actual, technical, usable things.