As I was saying before about our work on the Internet, online, we have to be where consumers and businesses are, so we've had to develop the capacity. When we, for example, execute a search to seize terabytes of data, we often seize mobile devices and have to examine the data that's on them.
Also, the characteristics of smartphones that make them so appealing as a payment system.... And by the way, that is, as you mentioned, on the rise. Many smartphones are now equipped with something called near-field communications. This simply allows people to either swipe or tap at a payment terminal and they can pay using their phone. There are 25 million mobile phone users in Canada, and the global estimate for mobile advertising revenue is expected to be $14 billion this year. It's on the rise. So it's not only financial companies but marketers who are very interested in mobile phones for one key reason: it also contains a lot of information about the consumer and also often has a geospacial device that tells marketers precisely where consumers are physically.
It's a wonderful marketing tool, if you will. You can be quite precise, if that's what consumers are interested in. There are applications like geo-fencing, where a virtual fence is set up around a certain retailer, for example, and when a consumer walks by it, they can be targeted with ads from the retailer outlets in that area. Or there is augmented reality, which works in a similar way. If you hold up your phone and look at a visual area, it can add ads on top of, for example, Parliament Hill, saying “Starbucks is nearby”.
We are very interested in this space, as are our counterparts around the world, simply because--to the point that another member made earlier--it becomes increasingly challenging for consumers to negotiate and transact on a device that is quite small, where many of the conditions of a contract are hidden in fine print disclaimers that require several screens to navigate through. It isn't impossible to make it a fair playing field, but we need to adapt with it, as do businesses, so that it is a fair playing field.