I'd be happy to.
The information of Canadians and the privacy of their information, the security of their information, is something top of mind for all of the deputies and ADMs who are sitting in the room. That is an accountability that I have within our office, and you'll see that, with the data breach that we've been working through with a third party provider, we've taken a very active role—perhaps when it wasn't ours to take—to protect our employees' information. That's at the core.
I think, as Scott outlined, there's been good investment in network and cybersecurity and in privacy protocols that really give us some comfort that we have both good protections and good response mechanisms with regard to that. I'm comfortable saying that I think we have the right things in play there. That doesn't mean that there's no risk. That means that we have some managed risk in that space.
In terms of the leap-frogging, that's a situation many organizations find themselves in, not just government. It's a huge opportunity to actually rethink business process and to move from old ways of doing things to new ways of doing things.
I think that Canadians should be concerned that we're on old infrastructure. I think that, in the programs where we need to be advancing that—like OAS, like EI, like our immigration system—we have the right practices in place there. They should feel comforted by the fact that we are starting to look at more modern technology, and part of that means standardizing, which ultimately is going to drive the cost line down if done well.