If I may, I will speak in English to be clearer, since it's my mother tongue.
I just want to say, Mr. Gourde, that's exactly what we're going to do. Next month, as your party and other parties in Canada are aware, we're introducing a very friction-intensive process for anybody who wants to run political ads. We are going to require them to authorize, to demonstrate that they're Canadian. We will need to independently validate the fact that they're Canadian, and then we're going to have to give them a code—or a key, if you will—where they're going to authenticate before they can run an ad.
This is not going to be a thing that happens in an hour. It's not going to be a thing that happens in a day. It's going to be a multi-day process. You have my assurance that we'll be reaching out and working in strict collaboration with all political parties in Canada to take them through this process. Precisely to your point about speed bumps or brakes, I would say this is going to be significant friction in the system, but we think this is the right thing to do in order to get ad transparency right, it's the right thing to do to get regulated political advertising right and it's an important thing to do to guard against foreign interference.