Yes. The coalition's position is that it's information that should be shared with customers, but there would have to be some further details provided so that the customer would be able to understand, to some extent, what happened, whether it was the fault of the business or whether something else occurred, with another customer, for example.
In terms of the level of fraud, again, one of the reasons we're calling for the audit is that I wouldn't trust the figures that are out there. In 1997 hearings on credit cards, government officials from the Office of Consumer Affairs at Industry Canada very much disputed the claims of the banks and other financial institutions about the actual level of fraud in the marketplace and the actual cost to those institutions. That's why an independent audit is needed to know what's really going on.
But consumers also do have a right to know this about businesses so they can take the self-protection measure of possibly not going to certain businesses--if it's actually the fault of the businesses that the fraud occurred.