We can in aggregate. That's what we share with our telcos around those calls as well as with the RCMP and the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre. We share aggregate information about campaigns we're seeing, campaigns the telcos are seeing.
To your specific question earlier, I'm well familiar with the TSPs and the fraud departments they have and the number of resources they have. I am certain that if they have complaints from a particular customer on being victimized, etc., there's a process for them to deal with those. Either the complainant can deal with them with law enforcement officials or Rogers may or may not—I use that name vicariously—with the RCMP as well.
If there are specific complaints of someone having been victimized, then there are methods of dealing with those, of course, through the criminal system. The challenge we face, even as the CRTC, is that we are seeing these campaigns, these types of things, that we pass along. For our colleagues at the RCMP, whom we appeared beside the last time, in March, that is one pile out of a very much bigger pile of cases they have to look at.
I'm sure there are ways, but for us there are details we can't share. We can share aggregate information. We can get everybody on a call saying, “Yes, we're seeing this type of activity, these types of things”, but we can't share the specifics.
To your point that a customer from Rogers, Bell, Telus or whoever is being victimized, we're sure there is a process for them to deal with that as well, but that's very separate from us. That goes to your criminal point.