Well it depends on whom you're asking for the information. If you're requiring the corporation to file that information—if that is a requirement of corporate law that you provide—as you now have to file a variety of information for publicly traded corporations, then it would have to go in the filing, so the corporation could not be created and would not exist.
If you're talking about this ex post facto, asking lawyers who the beneficial owners of corporations are, that presents potential issues with regard to solicitor-client privilege. That's one of the reasons we are so supportive of the idea of beneficial ownership registries. It becomes a matter of corporate law. It's simply a requirement like many others.
In addition to those situations in which lawyers are creating corporations—and they would have to on behalf of their clients comply with those requirements—there are other situations where lawyers aren't involved in creating the corporations but where we are seeking to impose an obligation on them to know who the beneficial owners are. This will provide a mechanism for them to be able to verify the information they get from their clients.