Yes. Just the line of questioning....
If we have to come to the standard of the GDPR, I would assume that the United States would also have to come to the standard of the GDPR.
Now, when I look at the privacy regimes in Canada, I see there are actually four. There is PIPEDA, and then there's what they determined in Alberta, B.C., and Quebec to be substantially similar privacy information protection acts. If you look domestically, if we're looking at reducing internal trade barriers and also looking at the fact that business people in provinces across Canada will have to raise their level to the European standard, would it not be...? Even right now there are differences between Alberta and B.C. Alberta and B.C. have three types of consent. Alberta has a privacy breach provision; B.C. and Quebec don't have a privacy breach provision. Ultimately, if we're going to rise to the GDPR level to make sure that we trade, eventually the whole country will have to have something that's much more substantially similar than what we have now—and also if the United States rises to that level, would it not be better to create one regime across the whole country?