Thank you for joining us.
I just want to get into one concept here. I'm not that familiar with the concept, but it's something I read about a short time ago. My assistant has helped me out with it as well, because he has more experience.
Mr. Gouglas, I think this goes to you first. Then I'll ask others to comment on it as well.
You talked about getting together as an industry. It seems that any contact we're having with the industry is from within Canada to the outside world, so it's a global conversation. We don't necessarily reach out to our own in Canada first. It seems that we could be more inclusive in this country—not to the exclusion of others, but I think you get what I mean—through the conventions, through the schooling, and that sort of thing. That's more of a comment than it is a question.
The question part deals with the interests of sharing IP, and I'm talking about open-sourcing here. Is there much more that can be done when it comes to open-sourcing, including old or unused IP, for that matter? I know you do a lot of work on certain games and that sort of thing, but a lot of it gets forgotten because it seems to be driven by the private sector.
In other words, are we not facilitating information for the sake of fostering new talent?