The cyber centre, when it stands up in about 10 days from now, will be relatively new. However, we have long-established relationships in terms of deconflicting. For example, cybercrime is the scourge of the Internet. We'd love to see law enforcement. I'd love to see some successful prosecutions so that we could start to create a disincentive for cybercriminals. With regard to our work with the cybercrime coordination unit that the RCMP will be setting up, for example, we're looking at making sure that we're in the same building so that we can be co-located.
We have a long-standing body that sits down with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Canadian Security Intelligence Service just to make sure that we're deconflicting anything operationally and that we're assigning the appropriate lead. For example, in the case of a national security investigation, I want CSIS to be able to go out and do some work on that, but we'll support in the mitigation piece. We know how to remediate the threat. We know how to work with the company and we want to see successful prosecutions. We want people to report cybercrime.
We're working it out. I've been in this long enough to know that there'll be some hiccups and that there'll likely be a little bit of posturing, but we're trying this out.