The first thing I would say is that the government, of course, is making some moves with respect to the platform sellers with respect to tax collection there. Certainly one of the challenges that Canadian retail merchants have faced was the situation where a marketplace seller was not collecting provincial taxes and therefore their all-in price was inevitably going to be lower than the price that was tax-inclusive. The federal government can make some moves in that area because of GST, and obviously HST in harmonized provinces, but it doesn't have the capacity currently to move with respect to the provincial taxes. So that's going to be a partial solution to that problem.
There's also a move afoot to make sure that the landed price, which is the price on importation in bulk, is not the basis of taxation, and that the basis of taxation is that which is charged to the end-user, being an individual consumer.
We are in somewhat better shape than we were perhaps worried about being prior to the renegotiation of NAFTA, because there was a significant push from the U.S. to gain access at very high levels of de minimis thresholds for its members.
I think it's probably beyond us to understand the full corporate tax implications and the sort of domicile and declaration of profitability. Our primary push has been to make sure, at least on a sales tax basis and also with respect to things like environmental stewardship fees and those sorts of issues, that they're even-handed and that they apply equally to an online vendor, whether domestic or a Canadian resident, and to somebody operating in a bricks and mortar store.