I don't know if individuals would be on it, and I can't speak for my organization, but I think a lot of people don't like the idea that there's a list, as I referenced. The “qualified Canadian journalism organization” or....I'm not sure specifically which list that story's referring to, but for those who get the not-for-profit status and the status where they will get a tax charitable status, there will be some sort of list that says which are approved to receive that charitable status. If you're talking about listing registered charities, okay, that's already a thing that's done online, and if it's somehow compatible with that, then fine; but any sort of separate list that is on a government website saying these are the qualified Canadian journalism organizations—that's a problem.
As I said in my remarks, to get any tax credit that's out there for your family, for your business and so forth, you don't go onto a government list. You or your accountant just files for it, and you either qualify or you do not. I think the idea of abolishing any sort of public list is the right direction to head. Year over year for the recipients of these tax credits, like any other tax credit that exists, or at least the bulk of them, that is what happens.