It's probably all of the above. It's understandable that in terms of the realm and spectrum of issues law enforcement has to respond to, IP crime isn't necessarily number one. The issue is making sure they take it seriously, or more seriously than they have historically. Law enforcement, particularly the RCMP, has gotten much better at that. It's more on the crown prosecutor side that there are some challenges.
Certainly in the United States they have done a lot on the education side. One of the initiatives was to introduce what's called the IP Enforcement Coordinator, which is a new office under the White House. It reaches out to the disparate departments that each have their piece of the IP puzzle to make sure they are all communicating with each other and looking at ways to do better enforcement using the resources that are available. First there is an educational element. They are also making sure they are allocating the resources to pursue IP crime, which they've done much more aggressively and much more robustly than we have in Canada.