Yes, absolutely. Let me pick up on and extend some of the comments I made at the beginning with respect to PIPEDA on the private sector side, which would of course implicate the obligations that Telus and BlueDot would have faced. That's legislation that's more than two decades old at this point in time. We've seen multiple provinces now move ahead with their own legislation, given that the federal government has been so slow in moving forward.
We also have, as I mentioned off the top, the European GDPR, which is effectively the model that many are comfortable with and are already seeking to comply with. It seeks to address some of these kinds of issues in terms of algorithmic transparency, in terms of greater penalties, and in terms of identifying some of the newer sorts of issues such as the right to be forgotten, and others, which form a part of what I think is widely viewed as a modernized privacy law, something that Canada no longer has.