It is one issue to nail down exactly what we're talking about in regulatory-speak, but people know what we're talking about. That's not necessarily the issue. As Ian pointed out, the purpose of the regulations we're working on is not to regulate the virtual currencies themselves. I'm not aware of any country attempting to do that. What we are attempting to do is what we call the “on-ramps” and “off-ramps”. There is a level of anonymity within the virtual currency space, although I would posit that there's actually a great detailing of records that also takes place; it's just that you don't necessarily know who is sitting behind it.
In terms of our purpose, once you try to move between the virtual currencies, or move into what we call “fiat” currencies—the Canadian dollar, for example—for all of these on-ramps and off-ramps there are requirements in place. When those dealers in virtual currency offer the service of converting virtual currency into dollars, let's say, they apply the types of obligations that money-service businesses have to apply in terms of defining the client, keeping records of the transactions, and so on.