We have privacy safeguards in place. It's very controlled. The systems are accessible only by authorized officials. It's very clear in the 43 commitments what CBSA is going to do with the information—where we're going to place it, who is going to access it, how long we're going to retain it, when we begin to depersonalize it, the reason we're accessing it.
The reason we're using it is related to terrorism only. We're not looking at that information and analyzing somebody for driving under the influence, for example. It's for the specific purpose of combatting terrorism and terrorism-related crimes, and transnational crimes specifically.