To answer your last question first, the use and the downloading of these data sets is totally anonymous. That is part of the privacy notice on the site. There are no accounts. You don't have to create an account to download a data set; you can download it, and we do not track that or keep that information. We're very vigilant about that.
In fact, we also have privacy requirements when we get feedback, such that we can only keep the information of the person requesting feedback for enough time to reply, obviously, to the person who may request some information. We have very strict privacy requirements, and the use of the data is totally anonymous.
That is to deal with your last question.
To distinguish between access to information and open data, departments ultimately will determine the speed and the schedule of publishing data sets. This is not access to information. Access to information will still go on; Canadians may still pose an access request. Most access requests are not about machine-readable data. They're usually about reports, documents, memos, etc. Access to information will continue.
We have, in our open government action plan, a few other commitments that support the open information stream of the open government action plan. In particular, since the first version of the plan, Library and Archives Canada have moved on our commitment to declassify and make available—I don't have the exact statistics—almost 10 million pages of information that was formerly classified and not available. That information is now freely available to Canadians through their website. That is in the stream of open information, in addition to the searchable summaries of ATI requests.
We also have another commitment, working towards a virtual library that will allow us to publish more information online in order to avoid unnecessary access to information requests. We're working through these commitments one by one.