It envisages the three separate organizations--the Privacy Commission, the Competition Bureau, and the CRTC--as being able to work with their counterparts. I wouldn't have described it quite as Interpol; I'd describe the communications regulator in Australia as the counterpart for the CRTC. It's the organization charged with oversight and implementation of their equivalent act. So our bill would allow the CRTC to share information with Australia to help Australia apply its own law if perhaps the spammer is located in Canada.
We can also work with them to try to make sure that spammers located in, say, some European countries, if they have a substantially equivalent law.... It can't be Australia; it must be some other jurisdiction because Australia has dealt with most of them. It probably allows them to exchange information with us that would allow us to help go after spammers from other countries who are targeting Canadians. Unless you can share information, you can't really take action against them. The provision of the bill allows that kind of provision of information and collaboration across these, essentially, administrative arms of government.