Thank you for your question.
Mr. Chair, it is true that the GST is payable by consumers. If a consumer is in Canada and the supplier is in Canada, then I think it's relatively clear that any supplier who's making supplies of advertising or media to a Canadian consumer is required to charge the tax, so the consumer is required to pay the tax, generally speaking. The question is different when we have a non-resident supplier, whether it's advertising, media, and so on and so forth.
Under the legislation and the way it is worded now, a non-resident is outside Canada and normally would not, generally speaking, charge and collect GST. However, there are instances where, I'll say, a supplier will have to, and the situation would be if the supplier is making a sale of something that is intangible or tangible to a Canadian consumer. If it's a tangible good, such as newspapers, magazines, and so on and so forth, the law is specific. That supplier is required to charge GST and get a registration number, so at least the non-resident supplier is treated the same way in regard to goods as the supplier who is located in Canada. The consumer has to pay. The non-resident has to charge and remit the GST.
Where it gets a little difficult is in talking about something that is intangible, such as digital supplies. Digital supplies don't go through the border, so there's nothing to touch. The way the legislation is worded, we have to determine whether this non-resident, this person who is making a supply in Canada, is making the supply through a location, a place of business in Canada. I'll give an example. We have supplier X, who is in the States and is making a supply of advertising to someone in Canada, but really, everything is being done through a place of business in Canada. That supplier has to charge and remit the GST, because he's considered to be carrying on business in Canada, so he's treated like everybody else. A—