Well, there are three missions. The money we've provided to about 50 institutions around the country is around hiring personnel, getting the software needed and making sure they can have the proper cybersecurity infrastructure in place. It is really about hands-on support.
When we launched these guidelines, it was a pilot in Canada. This had not been done before. What came out of it was that we need more tools and resources to make sure we can properly assess that.
I would say that what we will be publishing soon, the lists that are going to be following annex A and annex B in the guidelines, are going to be more specific than that. These are going to be really hands-on, I would say, to the question of colleagues before.... To draw up these lists is fairly complex, because now you are going to identify by name institutions that people should be worried about if they were to engage in certain types of research.
That, in my view, is kind of best in class. Like I said, research security is top of mind, because one of the key assets we have in Canada is our knowledge, our dataset and our IP. I think the framework that we have put, starting with the security guidelines, is kind of the umbrella. Then we're defining that with very specific tools to help institutions in the country.