Right now in the bill, the minister, in the ministerial authorization space, will lay out the privacy measures specific in that authorization on the use, retention, and disposition of that information, and we have to follow that. Again, some of those elements are listed on our website now. I can walk through them. There are policies, procedures, training, and what have you.
I think an important element to underscore is that the only way we would assist other law enforcement security agencies under their mandates is if they came to us with their own lawful authorities—under our assistance mandate—and then we would help them within the bounds of that lawful authority and that activity.
With respect to the kinds of things we're talking about here, for anything that we do in CSE, whether it's our intelligence collection, cyber-security, or dealing with publicly available information, we have to have privacy measures in place. There could be things that engage our privacy interests, so those measures have to be there.
There's a range of things, in terms of privacy measures, for the kinds of general research that we do, the kinds of intelligence-collection activities that we do in support of the Government of Canada's intelligence priorities, and the kinds of things that we do in response to requests from partners.