Thank you.
Let me come back, sir, to the Canada Border Services Agency, which currently doesn't have a mandate or the authority to search and seize and store and destroy counterfeit goods. I think that's something that needs fixing.
But in the meantime, let's say they come across a container filled with something that looks like counterfeit batteries—they just come upon it; they don't go out and actively search for it. I gather there are constraints right now in terms of what information they could share with intellectual property rights holders, such as the intellectual property rights holders for Eveready batteries in Canada, because of privacy constraints.
But in some countries there is a lot of information that is shared, so that at least intellectual property rights holders can exert their civil remedies. But right now there are constraints even to do that, and the criminal sanctions are not severe enough.