It's a collaboration and needs to be a collaboration in order to work well. In the last panel we heard a lot about how we can best enforce the bots laws. The fact of the matter is that the governments charged with enforcing those laws don't have the information they need in order to prosecute the bad actors.
The sites that are being attacked by bots are primary ticket sellers. StubHub is attacked by bots as well. We do our own part to try to shut down that activity. It's incumbent upon all of us, however, to collaborate with government to say, here's the information you need to go after bad actors.
Certainly there are some jurisdictional issues involved. Where are these bad actors located? When the harm is attacking Canadian consumers in whatever province they live in, however, there's an opportunity for enforcers to go after those bad actors wherever they live.
StubHub regularly collaborates with law enforcement when we detect fraud on our site, whether it be payment fraud or just fraudulent activity in general. It's a commitment we make across the entire eBay business. It's something we pride ourselves on and it's something I think we can encourage the rest of the industry to do.
Certainly there's a major responsibility from a technological standpoint. As StubHub, not necessarily in Canada but in other markets, is entering into the primary space, we're investing significant resources into learning how we can combat fraud attacks on our site as well.