Our ability to bring cases to either the Competition Tribunal or the criminal courts via the Public Prosecution Service of Canada is obviously fundamental. We have a prosecutorial model.
We've talked a bit today on the civil side about the ability to have financial sanctions that are scaled to the size of the enterprise that we're dealing with. This is something I perhaps should have brought up in response to Mr. Cumming's question, in the sense that another positive development, from our perspective, of Bill C-11, the privacy bill, is that the financial penalties in that bill are scalable. That is, they can be based on a percentage of global revenue. Many of our partners around the world have those types of financial penalty provisions in their acts. In my view, it's important, in order to encourage compliance with the law, to have sanctions that reflect the volume of commerce involved and the revenues at play.