Some of this falls under the ambit of the Minister of Public Safety. You're asking a framework question on the way in which the government is going to approach it. This is an important building block. It was a gap within CSE's mandates that they were constrained on the help they could provide in the existing context.
As I said before, the government is conducting a cyber-security review. The results of that will be available shortly, I hope. One of the key pieces in this—and here I would add that Public Safety manages the relationship with critical infrastructure sectors—is about knowing where to go, who to call when there's an issue. It's not about the size of the systems; it's about having the right connections. Right now, they sometimes call CSE, and they call our critical cyber-emergency response team, CCIRC, at Public Safety. We need to do a better job of coordinating that.
Much of this information is in an ecosystem where it needs to get shared really quickly, and that's a key role that CSE can play. It's about technical expertise. I will use the analogy of a fire. We send firefighters to a fire. In this instance, it might be one firefighter, because it's actually just a connection that needs to be made so that people understand that there's a fix, and this fix can be applied across the entire infrastructure.
There's an unnamed large American company that dealt with a lot of people's private data. It was one simple fix that was missed, and it had a profound impact on the entire organization.
It's important to frame this. I think we will see a further elaboration in the coming months. This is one important building block.