Thank you.
As I said earlier, and as the Auditor General mentioned, the numbers that total the $570 million include program activities for cyber-security that are not necessarily directed at cyber.
The investments we made in our activities for our contribution to cyber-security include improving and increasing intelligence production on foreign cyber-threats, because that's part of our foreign intelligence mandate. Also, we improved our capacity to detect and analyze threats on federal government systems. On those government networks, particularly the ones that are run by Shared Services Canada, that consolidate Internet connections for the government's systems, we deploy technologies that are able to detect cyber-threats that are not detected by commercial technologies because they are based on classified information about threats. That gives federal systems an added layer of security.
We do detection and analysis of the information we find there. As threats occur or are occurring, we can notify departments and provide mitigation advice on how to stop those threats from happening, and also longer-term advice so they can strengthen their systems to stop those problems from recurring.
With part of the funding we received, we run an IT security learning centre—