I think it has had an enormous impact. Part of the issue we face with our Access to Information Act is that it predates digital. It was designed in a mediascape that was very different from the one we operate in today. As a result, instead of starting from scratch and building a piece of legislation that really reflects the contemporary digital media landscape and the types of information holdings we have, we're trying to patch up this old piece of legislation and make it relevant to the digital era, and doing that is tough.
When we look at the Centre for Law and Democracy's ratings of various pieces of access to information legislation around the world, some of the ones we see that come out ahead of ours are ones that are new. They have been developed explicitly to deal with these issues. Just the level of information and data we have available to us now, the way we store that, and the way we fail to keep up information and data holdings as technologies change, as software changes, make it really difficult to have good information management. As I said earlier, that's really the foundation of being able to employ the act successfully.