I think we could be using technology much better. I mention this proactive disclosure example from 2006 with Treasury Board. It's been enormously successful. Everyone's always interested. We all know what prompted the interest in how much people spent for their lunches and so forth: it was taxpayers' dollars.
We could use that system in some of the ways we're recommending here to make the system more open, without requiring people to go through even an access request at all. I think President Obama spoke about that too, of using technology to achieve more transparency at a time when we have the means to do it—not of everything immediately, cabinet being a good example. In the policy development process, you can't say...or you could, I suppose, but most jurisdictions in most democracies allow public service to develop policy in confidence until it's at some point when they can disclose it or get input from members of the public. There are reasons for some exemptions, but I agree with you that we could use technology much better to achieve transparency.