Thank you very much.
My next two questions are also for Mr. Geist. At a committee meeting last week, I asked a question about official languages. You gave examples of open governments in Australia and the United Kingdom.
Do you think Canada has more hurdles to overcome because of its duty to respect two official languages, which is not the case in Australia or the United Kingdom, where they have just one language? Could that lead to additional hurdles when it comes to implementing an open government approach? What would those hurdles be, in your opinion?
You also talked about Bill C-32 and copyrights, and what is happening with that. Researchers will provide documents to the government, but I would like some clarification on that.
What copyrights should be respected? I would like you to elaborate on that. Earlier, you said that the government could assume those rights. Do you think the work of researchers should be covered by those rights?