Well, what we're seeing, particularly in the States in the way the Obama administration has implemented its open government strategy, is that they have strict timelines that people have to abide by. They have to produce results. They've just conducted an audit in terms of how the various departments are doing. There are implementation stages with specific timeframes and there are people who are accountable for what they're doing.
In the U.K., there is now a new transparency board. That was implemented this summer. I'm not quite sure how it's going to work, but that is the body that's going to be responsible for this.
In Australia, it's the Minister for Finance and Deregulation who is really responsible for the implementation of the open government strategy there, along with the information commissioner. The information commissioner in Australia is very much part of the open government strategy and has an expanded mandate in order to participate in that.
So yes, strict timelines, strict accountabilities, and measurement of results are definitely part of what we're seeing in the other jurisdictions.