It is different, and each of the other jurisdictions has interesting lessons to learn from us. The U.K. and Australia are Westminster models, so they have perhaps similar issues with cabinet confidences and other types of information. Parliamentary privilege issues would be very similar. They have crown copyright issues.
The Americans are our trading partners, so that's a different consideration. Do we want our researchers, our academics, our interpreters to have less access to data and less access to potential data sets that will lead them to create innovations in Canada versus the U.S.? These are the types of things we should look into. But we have to develop what's good for us and look at and perhaps benefit from what's going on in the provinces.