Right now, within our federal policing criminal operations area that I'm in charge of, we have quite a few efforts under way to help build trust and confidence, build the relationships with the financial institutions, the banks, the private cybersecurity companies, as well as leveraging our Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre, our federal policing public engagement group, our contract indigenous policing education efforts that are out there, to ensure they were taking on the multipronged approach of partnership. We're leveraging what's already there within the cybersecurity industry, whether it be banks or in private-type security companies, building those relationships, ensuring we understand the problem itself.
As I stated earlier, we would be overwhelmed with the reporting. I'll go back and reflect on my first day in the cybercrime area in federal policing. I asked for a report of every incident, every possible technological attack that was going just against Government of Canada systems. It overwhelmed my email system with two reports, so the volume is too much.
We have to collaborate in our response to that. We put significant effort into it. I'm very much looking forward to the new centre being stood up so that we can appropriately hand over some of those responsibilities to the centre to perform those actions on behalf of all law enforcement in Canada because—