I think other countries have the same problem that you're facing in Canada, and they're coming up with similar solutions. I know you've heard from Rod Sims, who has done this in Australia. The Australian model has a lot of lessons to be taken from it.
Everybody faces the same problem, which is a crisis in journalism. Everybody sees the same diagnosis, which is that monopoly and the digital advertising industry is a huge contributing factor to that crisis. They are looking for ways to intervene to make sure the public gets journalism.
I think what Bill C-18 has going for it is that it leans in the direction of greater transparency. I would argue for more. It leans in the direction of mandatory minimums for using funds to support the production of journalism. I would argue that those should be more explicit. It leans in the direction of trying to make sure that every publisher—whether it's a small, rural organization or a large, urban organization—gets an equitable deal.
Those are all important improvements on the Australian bill and things that I think could be clarified in this bill to make the Canadian law the world leader.