Well, if you're dealing with the Government of Canada, I would probably say yes. I think that government, over the course of the last and current governments, has made some real strides in developing the capability to defend Government of Canada systems. They've limited the Government of Canada's systems' access to the Internet, which made things a lot easier to control.
I kept coming back to the weakest link in the chain. All you need is one weak link that allows you to access everything. Having said that, I think on the cyber side, the government is doing better than it might do on terrorism. I don't think it's doing terribly on terrorism. I was just trying to suggest that there's a limit somewhere to what you can do.
If you expand that to provincial governments, for example, there are connections between the provinces and the federal government. The provinces vary a great deal, I believe, in how protected they are. Then you keep moving on, and it doesn't take a great deal of imagination.
I'll give you an example: I read a couple of years ago that there was a mom-and-pop metal welding shop—I think it was in Arizona—that had its own little server and whatnot. A foreign state used a problem there to access an element of the U.S. government in China. The point I'm trying to make is that it doesn't take a big hole, to use a physical manifestation, to get in.
I think, generally speaking, we're not doing badly. We really aren't, but if we think that we have blocked every possible cyber-attack against us or our economy, then I think we're being way too optimistic.