It's in our annual do not call list report. To date, we're at about $11 million over the last 10 years. In the past year it's been about $600,000.
I think the point to make here, and what Ian was alluding to, is these are the administrative monetary penalties that companies have willingly...or have been charged with because they have violated the telemarketing rules. These are legitimate players who are, if you will, paying for the sins of the past and, “Oh, we didn't buy the list. We didn't call the right people at the right time,” etc.
I think what you're speaking to, Mr. Masse, is more the fraud-related side of this piece, the 50% that is fraud. That's not where we can apply our administrative monetary penalties.
If I could just go back to your previous question, Mr. Masse, I think what's important to understand is that we are a civil regime. You could give me $10 million tomorrow and I'd be very happy, because I could have the entire CRTC working on telemarketing cases and anti-spam cases. However, we are a civil regime, not a criminal regime, so it still might not have the impact you want on the fraud side.