I'll answer that, although not necessarily about new frameworks. I can talk about some of the measures that exist now.
As Superintendent Beaudoin mentioned, there's both the domestic piece and then the international co-operation piece. That's a big piece of what the mandate of the CAFC and NC3 is about. It's about working with law enforcement partners domestically and then linking those efforts, where possible, to international efforts. That could be bilaterally with other countries and also multilaterally.
A good example in the cybercrime space is that we work quite a bit with the European Cybercrime Centre. They have a specific group, the joint cybercrime action task force, of 18 member states of Europol plus some third parties—Canada, the U.S. and Australia. Out of the Europol headquarters, they are in contact daily, trying to work these international investigations together.
That is a great example of how collaboration at the multilateral level can lead to further investigations and, if not to arresting or prosecuting cybercriminals and fraudsters, to going after their infrastructure. There have been quite a few successes on that front.