I think it is occurring, and it's fairly early for me and difficult to give examples, because it's mostly anecdotal. It's fairly clear to me from just the growth in industry, the government consultation industry around Canberra itself, how many organizations now feed off government information. Unfortunately, I can't give better hard examples of that.
Government agencies have signed on fairly easily to this Gov 2.0 proactive publication agenda because it's a good-news story for government. They see the benefits of better interaction with the community. They like the stories. Obviously, what they find harder is the freedom of information reforms, which give the right to individual journalists and the opposition to request any document they want to get access to.
I don't want to take too much time, but one big sticking point we're discussing is that if government agencies have to publish information online, they're meant to comply with web accessibility guidelines, which means the information is available to the whole of the community, including people with a disability, particularly a sight disability. That's posing a practical challenge for government agencies because of the added cost of making information available in multiple forms.