I was really encouraged when the government took the step to introduce the bill, because in 2007 there had been an indication that this wasn't going to be the case.
Right now, depending on where you are in the country and what ISP company you're working with.... Some ISPs will actually cooperate with law enforcement, and some won't. A lot of the bigger companies will.
We've heard about cases from law enforcement. They have an IP address. They actually are able to trace the guy to where he lives, and they go, because he's trading in child pornography. There was a case, I think, that the Ottawa police worked on with law enforcement on the other side of the river, in Aylmer. They actually found and arrested the person. He had with him his 11-month-old son, who he was sexually abusing. Now, law enforcement had no information that this was taking place. They had no idea that this child was in that situation. Had they not tracked him down, that child today, four years later, would still be undergoing sexual abuse.
The longer we delay these initiatives to give law enforcement the tools, the more kids are going to be abused. I think that makes everybody angry. We have the tools. We have agreement, frankly, from what I hear, in Parliament, to move forward to give law enforcement the tools, yes, to catch the bad guys but also to save kids' lives. That's tremendous.