I can. It's really the Canadian Internet Registration Authority's project, and I'm hoping that I'm not scooping them, but they did advise us that earlier this week we now have 100,000 Canadians using the service. That's a good number—although not as much as I would like, honestly, because it does offer a significant boost to the privacy of information.
I do understand that one of the things we really thought about when we designed this and worked with them on the service was for the government to be at arm's length. We didn't want it to look like there was the potential that we were collecting information on Canadians. That's not our mandate. That's certainly not within our law that governs us, but there's also a privacy assessment that went along with it.
I'm hoping that as Canadians do look into this, they will see what's out there. We did have commentary from privacy experts in industry who talked about this program and how it's designed. I'm hoping that more Canadians, as they become aware, will grab onto this, because it is a way for every Canadian to do something to protect themselves, and it's something that is silent and in the background.
For me, here's the way I describe it. We're all worried that we're going to make that one mistake and click on that one link on an email and it's going to have devastating consequences. The goal with Canadian Shield and what we've tried to do is to make sure that if you click, it's not going to have devastating consequence, because it will be blocked. That's kind of what it does.