That's an interesting question.
I would say I think they have to go hand in hand because the idea of having a regime that is internationally interoperable is critically important. I think many jurisdictions are increasing their focus on privacy protection for data, because of the importance of data and what data can do to drive economic development, and what data can do to drive innovation. Best practices continue to bubble up to the surface in organizations like the OECD or APEC.
For Canada, if we think about where we want to be leaders in some of the digital economy, for example, ensuring that we offer a welcoming environment for organizations that want to set up data centres here, and the idea of applying best practices and having a model that is very usable for international businesses to say that, yes, Canada is a location of choice for data, we need to be leaders in how we think about it. But we can't make a regime that doesn't work internationally with the people we want to trade data with.