I sat on the Minister of Industry's national task force on spam, and we spent a lot of time in that year, as part of that task force, working with law enforcement at the Department of Justice, as well as the RCMP, trying to address the issue. I came to appreciate during that time just how hard it is to get the resources from the RCMP and Justice and law enforcement officials generally to turn their attention to some of these issues. The RCMP has put IP crime among its top five priorities and has escalated the number of charges they've laid over the last number of years, so that we're now in the thousands over a period of time—and this is just the RCMP, not local law enforcement—and it does, in my view, an enormous disservice to our law enforcement across the country to suggest somehow that this isn't prioritized. It quite clearly is prioritized.
The issue here, and let's be frank, is that law enforcement has made clear that their priority in this area is health and safety. That's not the priority of the person who is selling the little alligator on their shirt. But I think we ought to recognize that law enforcement has prioritized this issue and, indeed, has been very active, taking resources away—in our case we couldn't get them to deal with spam, and spyware, and identity theft—because they were focusing on some of those other issues.