Thank you.
Thank you to the witnesses for being here.
Mr. Neiman, I'm going to continue by following up on Mr. Shipley's questions. You're with the Business Council of Canada. About two weeks ago, I had the Insurance Bureau of Canada in, and we discussed the increasing risk that small and medium-sized enterprises are facing, possibly through cyber-attacks, which can lead to foreign interference based on whatever content they're in possession of.
It was interesting, because they were asking us how they deal with it. How are companies dealing with something like this now?
Are they buying insurance policies on cyber-attacks, which will likely lead to foreign interference if, for example, they hold certain information that could be very essential to them, to an individual, to a community or to a community group or something?