There are a few things. One is to make clear that this element is actually making explicit something that occurs now with respect to CSE. We use infrastructure information, which, as the legislation states, can be linked to an identifiable Canadian.
We do that to understand the global information infrastructure in which we operate. We use it in some of the other ways Shelly referred to in her statement, when she talked about how it has to be consistent with our mandate. We're not a domestic investigative agency. We don't build dossiers on Canadians and can't cross-reference data for the purpose of going deeper into any Canadian's private activities.
As well, as mentioned, stolen or hacked information would not be available for our use. I draw attention to Justice Canada and the charter statement it released at the time of the tabling of this bill, which talks about publicly available information and the reasons it is a different kind of beast than the kind of information that has attached to it the reasonable expectation of privacy and would be subsumed within the ambit of the ministerial authorization process.