That's an important question. We wrestle with this in wanting to facilitate reporting. We are certainly passionate about making more people aware and reporting. The challenge we're running into, even on the provincial side and even in our relationship and partnership with Ontario and Alberta, is that the issue surrounding the identification potentially of a child and the role of child welfare within that equation presents a number of complications. Those departments have to be primed, educated, and aware and know what to do. I think the challenge, if there were a federal obligation that wide, would really be how we then properly prepare the front-line folks and individuals who are going to be responsible for it.
That's part one. Part two is part of what we're seeing, and you will see this in the research report. We received 48,000 reports. Of that number, only 44% were triaged and forwarded to police because they would be deemed potentially illegal. Of that 44%, only a much smaller number ended up actually going to Canadian law enforcement agencies, meaning that the majority of the content is hosted outside of Canada.
So to answer the question, it's hard for us to say how we would institute and manage something that was so broad as to apply to every citizen in Canada under federal legislation.