I think that's part of the problem. Every country is dealing with a growing global problem of counterfeit and piracy. Countries are improving their regimes. All of the countries are, on an almost continuous basis, looking at what they are currently doing and what they could be doing, and at whether it's working or not.
It's very difficult to say that any one country is actually effective at this point. With new technologies and everything else, it's very difficult to counter. The countries are doing what they can do domestically, but also internationally. We need more integrated cooperation and information exchange to actually combat this.
One of the things we've encountered is that when we stop a shipment of fake batteries, we now have links with Mexico and the U.S. to tell them that we have stopped a fake shipment from X country, because the next step, if we stop it, is that the same shipment often goes either to Mexico or the U.S. and tries to get in. If they have warning in advance—we get them also from our colleagues in other countries—then we can adequately prepare and alert CBSA to look for these kinds of shipments.
A lot of this is going to be international cooperation, because one country's efforts aren't going to stop a problem.