I should be much clearer about that floor or standard I was talking about.
That is what many of us outside of government have come together on to encourage the Obama administration to begin doing, because of this concern we have that while valuable information is being released, we want to see other high-priority information. Who did it? It's a unique, if you will, coalition. It's one of the first times ever outside of the government world that journalists and the advocacy community and the academic community have come together to propose this kind of standard or floor. It cuts across political axes, that is, left or right, because almost everybody supports transparency regardless of political ideology. You may want to use it for different purposes, but you want the right to the same kind of data.
In terms of the international, I think there's an interesting effort. You may know that the President of the United States spoke to the UN in September and raised this notion that a year from then, which will be September 2011, many of the countries should come together to talk about stretched efforts to create openness. There is this international open government initiative that is starting to form with multiple countries.
It is at its infancy at this moment, but it would be a great effort to take a look at. I don't know if the U.K and...I didn't hear what the other country was that you're interested in.