In preparation for this, I went through all of the other witnesses' testimony. If I were to offer advice to remedy what I saw in the previous evidence, I'd offer you three pieces of advice.
The first is, get your information-sharing house in order. It was one of those kinds of things where everyone didn't really know who was sharing what with whom, when, and why. There was a recognition that this was a problem. As my colleague Mr. Wark has indicated, the MOU has been updated. If you haven't seen that, I would encourage you to take a hard look at that and just make sure that it's tight. Also, treat this like a dress rehearsal. This is going to happen again and again. Just make sure you know who's on first with respect to the sharing of information, what happens and what that threshold is.
The second, as I had already indicated, is to have some personal money to protect yourselves. While the evidence indicated that the threat was stopped, we don't know—I'm sorry, Mr. Genuis—about your personal account, because that wouldn't have fallen within the IT department of Parliament.
The third is training, but not just cyber training. It's general awareness so that you can be your own best partner in your defence.