Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to come back to the look of the website, which is very statistical. It looks like a table of contents. Its front page is still displaying information on the CODE event that was held over the weekend in Toronto.
Something Ms. Miller said, I think, caught my attention. She said that our students were leaving for Silicon Valley. We know that Silicon Valley was built from scratch. That's not a utopia. In the beginning, there was nothing there but desert. Yet an amazing computer technology hub was built in Silicon Valley.
Here, some things have been done for the film industry—be it in Ontario or in Quebec—that have contributed to its success. Similarly, a site dedicated to open data could be created. Our students could go to some wonderful locations, such as Gaspésie or Lake Louise, in Alberta. Time will tell whether this is a utopia or not. They could perhaps be gathered in one place and be provided with the necessary tools, similarly to what was done for the people who created Silicon Valley from scratch.
What assets could the University of Waterloo provide to the Open Data Institute?
Will the University of Toronto partner with the Open Data Institute?
Would it be possible to create winning conditions, either in terms of tax credits or something like that, to keep our researchers and students in that field in Canada—at the University of Toronto, among others?