Yes. They're also part of the escalation process, so if an event became significant, the Cyber Incident Response Centre would reach out to the Government Operations Centre to draw in a broader range of government response, in a number of ways, and also to reach up to more senior levels within the government if it were required.
The other thing is, when we're dealing with our clients—the people who would likely be phoning in, the business clients—the nature of the cyber-attacks we're dealing with are things where the identity of that attack occurs over a period of time. It's not likely that you sit and watch it occurring in live time, so typically the companies watching this will see it and will be working during the day—hence, we’re working essentially the same hours—because the detection of these attacks can actually take many days to occur and there'll be a lot of analysis going on by the companies themselves. Once they see that, they will then contact the Cyber Incident Response Centre.
A similar program is also in place with our allies. The United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand run the same system.