The challenge we face is that, for us, it's very explicit. We don't direct our activities at Canadians.
When you're dealing with social media fake accounts or parody accounts—which is another thing we've seen this summer, for example—and looking at where the line between a fake account and a parody account is, the challenge we have is that those are simply not within our mandate to try to tackle. We try to increase the basic cyber-resiliency of these systems, but I think the use of social media and the constraints we would like to place on that is probably something better left to departments like the Department of Canadian Heritage, which would look at digital media and online interaction.
On the security intelligence side we would be looking for the foreign threat actors, certainly, to see if they are taking advantage of that, so we would take action. We are looking at the foreign activity that would be targeting Canada, but looking at the accounts themselves, etc., especially when you start to cross into a domestic context, would just be outside of the mandate of CSE.