The World Customs Organization has identified China as, I think, the source of about 80% to 90% of the counterfeit goods. That's not to say that it's all manufactured in China, but it's the source. It could start someplace else, end up on a boat in Hong Kong, and come over here. You're not going to find much counterfeit product coming from the United States into Canada. Believe me, it's going the other way, if anything.
Increasingly you're finding manufacturing taking place here. One of the reasons you're finding manufacturing taking place, particularly in the entertainment end of the business and the software end of the business, is that the technology is available now to manufacture counterfeit copies using DVD burners on a massive scale in the basement of a mall. Hundreds of thousands can be manufactured like that. So they don't necessarily need to manufacture them in sophisticated operations in Malaysia, or wherever, and then send them here—although they do.
You might have read the stories about Lucky and Flo, the two black Labradors that can smell polycarbonate through steel doors. Did you read about these guys? The two dogs are touring Southeast Asia right now with a bounty on their heads. There's a bounty that has been put on their heads by the counterfeiters because they're the only two dogs in the world that can sniff polycarbonates through steel doors, so it's driving the counterfeiters crazy.
But they're doing it here in very large numbers, and it's very sophisticated.