At the present moment, I think we're on the low side of response in terms of investment and I think in terms of empowerment for the security establishment to respond.
I think that may shift. We have a pending government cyber-strategy that may boost us into a new level of the atmosphere, but currently I think Canada is seen as being somewhat trailing its key allies, from the United Kingdom to Australia and New Zealand and elsewhere. To me that's very problematic, because while my responsibility as the provincial security advisor is to help or assist in certain strategic issues around the prosperity agenda, it's mostly around protecting critical infrastructure and around cybersecurity.
With that in mind, as I said, we or they—those who own that critical infrastructure—cannot do it alone. These are some of the large independent agencies of the Ontario government in, let's say, the health care sector, education, transportation. We need to bolster our capabilities to make ourselves on par with places like Australia.