I touched a little bit on that in my presentation, saying that there are things in the public realm under crown copyright that are outside or past the digital divide, if we want to call it that. There are countries, such as the U.K., that have massive digitization projects. Australia is doing that sort of thing. They are doing past legislation and past parliamentary materials under crown copyright on a huge scale. These are, of course, searchable.
You know as well as anyone who deals with parliamentary materials how important progress in statutory research is, and similarly, how important a treatise is. A commentary on the law from 1840 something can be as valid now as it was in the past.
There are commercial interests that are producing this on grand scales, and libraries pay for them very happily. These are the sorts of materials—a particular portion of a book—that a rich academic law library will lend to a poor member of the CALL association. It could be a law society. It could be a court house. That's how we are now talking to each other. That's the sort of thing that's happening.
In terms of what's happening here in Canada, we're not going fast enough in terms of digitization.