On the point of the public sector being covered, in British Columbia, the public sector is covered. That's everything from the Crown corporations, which you talked about, to school boards, municipalities—all the functions, basically, of the public sector.
The British Columbia government recently made changes to our Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act that require public bodies now to produce privacy management programs, the thing that we just talked about in the private sector. We believe that's a very positive development. It means that every single public body in the province has to focus on what personal information they have about all of us and how they're going to deal with it if things go wrong—what the emergency plan is in place. As well, in the public sector now, there's mandatory breach notification; when breaches happen, individuals are notified.
Of course, in the public sector, it's not a consent-based model. We, as citizens, really don't have much of a choice, in most cases, about giving over our information to public bodies to get the services that we require. Therefore, it's very important that the law carefully authorize that collection and that it be regulated. We certainly believe that, in British Columbia, it is done in a very effective way.