We have work to do there. I think the whole challenge—a core challenge—with the digital economy is that with other products, we had standards and processes before they came to a marketplace. When we saw the digital economy, mobile applications and websites, what was really cool and exciting was that they could come to the market really quickly.
It means that app stores like Google's and Apple's, you could argue, are stronger regulators of the digital economy than states or countries like Canada. They're deciding what comes to the marketplace and under what terms, and that is what helps create and exacerbate this gap between our legislative ability to keep up and make sure that legislation and regulatory realities reflect what people are experiencing in their everyday lives.
Perversely, when that doesn't happen and continues not to happen and it feels like the state doesn't have our back as consumers and as citizens, you get worse trust and more unrest.
