We certainly don't want to blame the victims for this. It is hard, I understand, just keeping on top of all of this.
The first thing that we say to businesses, as well as individual citizens, is to just turn on auto updates—on our phones, just slide it to auto updates. However, the industry does need to make this easier. In many cases it is: Our home laptops, our home computers, etc., tend to do this now by default. You have to manually set them to not auto update so that the updates are manual.
That's good progress, but it needs to be made better.
The real challenge is for businesses where the equipment doesn't do that. The equipment requires a system administrator to download a patch or an update, to go onto the device, to install it, to test it, and it may or may not work because the device, really, is finicky. That's where the industry really does need to start stepping up on cybersecurity to make it easier for these small and medium-sized organizations to stay up to date.
However, there is some hope. The cloud does offer some benefits to these organizations where updates are automatic. With regard to the cyber centre, one of the things we did when we stood it up was to move our operations into the cloud because we wanted to work like every business in Canada either was working that day or was going to be working. We wanted to live our own advice. What we do is.... I get updates. In fact, I just saw—my computer just told me—that I just got an update for my Microsoft Teams environment that we use to say that, yes, we have the updates. You get them right away when they're issued by the vendor.
That makes it easier. That takes the pressure off those small and medium-sized organizations to do things. When you do that, that means that you don't have to do it yourself. You don't have to go in and download the patches and install them because it comes with it.
That's really where we're saying that it has to be easier for the users and not place the blame on them.