There are two ways of answering your question, and I'm going to use the way that makes the departments look good first. In the past, when there have been these questions about who holds confidential business information, they have bent over backwards to find the owners of that information to ensure that before they make a public disclosure of any kind, the people who own that information have the opportunity to put up their hand and say, “Wait a second, this is not a good idea. This is still something that we believe to be important to the business confidentiality of our company.”
How this particular clause operates in the future is going to depend as much on our OECD partners, how they hold that information and how their access laws are designed.
Our access to information laws are designed on a trilogy of acts, and when an access request is made for anyone's information, and there is a question about that confidential business information, the onus is on industry to prove to the government that they shouldn't disclose it if the government plans on disclosing it through an access to information request.
I've filled out thousands of those requests and replies, and I believe the government does a very good job at safeguarding that information.