Those companies still have to meet Canadian standards if they operate in Canada or are collecting information, let's say in the privacy context, from Canadians. It's not that they get a free pass in that regard. It's that, if we take a look at the U.S. strategy, notwithstanding the claims that people like Donald Trump are making about whether or not the U.S. is a winner or loser on the TPP, the U.S. has long sought to carefully and closely align its commercial interests with its trade policy. They actively discuss with their businesses about where they're headed and they try to ensure that their businesses' priorities and their legal systems are reflected, because they believe there's a competitive advantage in having that reflected in trade agreements.
Canada didn't do that in the TPP. It's one of the reasons why you see some prominent business leaders being highly critical of the agreement. I think, as I say, it's a mistake that ultimately puts us at a bit of a competitive disadvantage.