Well, when there wasn't a clear distinction between personal information and work product information.... Take a garage, for example, that contributes to one of a few databases available in the industry. They'll submit that this was the repair they did, the time it took to do it, the cost of the repair, etc.--a lot of information like that. These databases are available. Everybody in the industry uses them. They take that work product information and use them, as I say, to improve their own products and services. Now if that garage owner didn't want to give his competitors a chance to do as well as he was doing and he said that this is personal information and he's not providing it to anyone, I think we'd all be losers. That's potentially what we're facing by not defining work product information as distinct from personal information.
I can give you a million other examples of where you have a provider of a service who says he is not going to give the information about how many patients he saw today, where he saw them, and what the cost of those services were.