We'll see how it goes.
If I may, I would like to start by asking Professor Geist about data localization.
You spoke about that in some detail, but I was intrigued by some of the things you said and would like to have you expand.
You spoke of localization being important for Canadians, if I understood you correctly. You named some large data collectors and spoke of the necessity or desirability of localized data in Canada, while recognizing the undesirability of data localization in countries—you named China—where restrictions on the transmission of data are problematic and controlled by the state.
Would not some of our other international partners perhaps have a problem with Canada appointing itself the arbiter of where localization is good and where it is bad? How do you think this would work in the eyes of the international community?