I think we are in a world where some of what matters—the information and the data—resides in government hands, but most of it does not. With the way the technologies are evolving and the way the research is evolving, what we need is.... Even if you were able to build a Fort Knox in one area, if you leave the back door open, it's not going to work.
From that point of view, when I talk about the more complex threat environment, we're dealing with actors that are extremely agile in understanding our system. They have access to a lot of expertise, both inside and outside the country, to understand how our system works. We see these attempts to adapt their tactics and their techniques to what we are doing.
Here's a concrete example from the not so recent past. After Parliament changed legislation, we saw some indications of some actors being able to understand how that legislation works. They were essentially finding a way to be able to accomplish their objective through bypassing the new legislation. It's a bit of a cat-and-mouse environment in which we need not just the intelligence service or the federal government to be on their toes very quickly; it requires all of the members of that ecosystem to be on their toes as well.