It's a very interesting and topical conversation and it's something I dealt with a lot certainly in my previous role as the director general of the Canadian Police Information Centre, because we do have an established exchange with—I'll use the United States as the main example. Through this gateway that I described earlier we exchange information with them. It's not to say it hasn't been without some of its own challenges with respect to Canadians citizens at border points, because the U.S. is a sovereign country and they make their own decisions with respect to inadmissibility or admissibility. We don't have a great deal of control over that.
What I would say is that when we look at exchanging different types of information the best approach from a privacy perspective is always to create an opportunity for discovery, but not, as has been stated, to release the dossier if you will. So by creating an opportunity for discovery, then a specific conversation can occur between the interested parties, and the information that's being held by the originator can then be released appropriately according to the laws of the country.