Yes.
The biggest challenge we have today in those reports is the sheer volume of the victimization that's occurring, and the fact that the anonymization that's available on the Internet is being taken advantage of by the cybercriminals makes it much more difficult to track them down. However, we are combatting that through the international collaboration that we have, the much closer relationships that we do have with the financial sector. We are leveraging the resources that many of those large banks and other financial institutions have to secure their own networks and integrating them into our investigative efforts to help de-anonymize or help take advantage of errors that occur while cybercriminals are using the Internet to commit their crimes, to tackle them more effectively.
We've gone well beyond the days of the police saying, “Thank you for the report.” Now we will go and investigate and we will tell you what you need to know. We are working much more collaboratively. In fact, in one significant incident we had recently, we actually integrated security staff and financial institution security staff and private sector cybersecurity expertise into our investigative efforts, and the benefits are proving to be very high.