Thank you, Chair. I will happily take those five-plus minutes.
I want to go back to the comment that you made earlier about your difficulty in accessing a particular news article. I just want to make the comment that when Google uses tactics like blocking Canadians' access to news sources and information, it fails to be a reliable service for consumers. I guess it's not surprising that we hear reports that companies like Samsung are considering dropping Google as the default search engine on their phones.
I wanted to make that comment and then turn back to my questions about artificial intelligence, its ability to and the likelihood that it will upend linking entirely. We've seen this with some of your competitors. They include artificial intelligence in their search engines. In some cases, the language model tools scrape data and content from behind paywalls.
We heard this from your CEO. He seemed to hint at it when the Wall Street Journal asked him if he sees link-based search as the dominant way people access information on the Internet in the future. His answer was, “I think the experience will evolve substantively over the next decade.”
Mr. Walker, please tell us whether you will be following in the footsteps of some of your competitors and getting rid of links altogether?