At the time, some of my main recommendations were based on the reality that far-right extremism so often falls in a policy gap between the community safety initiatives and counterterrorism. Counterterrorism practitioners and the counterterrorism community across Canada needed to be equipped at the time with the skills to engage with far-right terrorism. I think that has dramatically improved in the last 10 years, both to Canada's credit as well as that of the international government community.
That said, I think where the threat has evolved since 2011 is in the online space. There is this worrying risk that members of the wider public are coming into contact with this content that was once relegated to very niche spaces online, or even to niche communities off-line.
My major concern is that the content that's being pushed by violent far-right groups and also violent incel groups is suddenly emerging into mainstream communities online. This is where we need to invest not only in prevention but in broader programs, to build, as I mentioned, critical media consumption skills amongst the wider public to prepare them for the possibility that they will encounter this.