Sure.
I would preface this by saying that active cyber operations are meant to achieve an objective that the government has established, and that it's a team sport. That means we each are bringing our mandates, our authorities, and our capabilities to this table. It really is a way of working together to figure out who has the right authority to address the right issue at the right time based on their skills, their mandates, and their authorities.
In the case of CSE, I mentioned some of these operations in my opening remarks, such as interrupting or disrupting ISIL communications, networks, media machines in a way that would stop attack-planning before things reached a crisis pitch. There's also interrupting the spread of ransomware that's being pushed around the world, and interrupting subversion to the democratic process. As my colleague mentioned, we have had instances in the past where sensitive information has been stolen from Canadian systems and is now on foreign systems abroad; therefore, we could find ways to corrupt that data or to make it inaccessible to others who want to take advantage of it and use it for their own benefit.