I like Swedes too.
Mr. Chair, yes, we certainly talked to all of those, and other countries, as we developed it. It's not that anybody else has a knowledge sharing platform like we had. We are taking something from another country and incorporating it because it is new. It's a Canadian innovation. All of the developed countries you've mentioned, and more, have experience in trying to build capacity in developing countries. Whether they send officials to help on the audit side, or technical officials to help them build their systems, there is a rich experience in developed countries—I could call it roughly the OECD countries—in providing that kind of assistance to build capacity in developing countries. We've learned from those to think about what is most helpful to developing countries.
On the issue of the KSP and the web-based platform, that's something new. I think all of the countries involved, developed and developing, are seeing this as a very useful tool. It's obviously a demand on resources to send someone somewhere for two weeks at a time. If you can get a long way there by putting the relevant material and manuals on the platform, it can be accessed electronically, and then you can save those in-person visits for discussions that are a bit more precise.