Now, it is true that technology has moved much beyond what was perhaps envisaged when the Group of Ministers met in 2001 or when the NTRO was set up in 2004. Now, when the technology moves forward very fast, we cannot lag behind; we have to acquire the technology. In fact, let me assure the hon. Members, the technology that the NTRO has is not as sophisticated as it is made out. In fact, I am privy to knowledge which I acquired recently that there are other organizations in the world which have technology far superior and many, many years ahead of the technology the NTRO has today. In fact, when I visited one of the countries, I was one of the few who was allowed full access to what they have and what I saw amazed me on the one hand, and, to some extent, frightened me on the other. That kind of technology is available among a few countries in the world. We do not have that kind of technology. The NTRO has acquired the technology. That technology must be put to use and that technology must be put to use subject to very stringent safeguards. The Leader of the Opposition said, technology bugs. Technology does not bug. It is the use of technology and the user of technology who bugs. Technology by itself does not bug anything. We have a machine. The machine does not do anything. It is how the machine is employed, where it is employed, who uses the machine and under what conditions the machine is used. We are, therefore, as I said, in the process of reviewing the entire functioning of the NTRO and putting in place safeguards that will keep pace with the technology that NTRO has acquired and, if I may say, that NTRO will acquire in the future. I cannot say that NTRO will not acquire new technology; it will acquire and it must acquire. But we must put in place safeguards that will keep pace with the technology that we may acquire in the future.