Absolutely. I agree there's opportunity there, but for the reasons you mentioned, I'd be fairly conservative about how I would try to engage in that opportunity. One of the things that the government has done, and I think has been quite effective, has been a canonical source for data that is highly trusted. Statistics Canada creates data that is highly trusted by people in the non-profit, for profit, and government space. Having something whereby people can all point to a dataset and say they believe that and they use that as the foundation for their conversation is enormously useful and cannot be underestimated.
To talk about how you crowdsource the creation of data creates an enormous number of methodological problems that I would be wary of rushing into, especially when we have so much data that is canonical and is verifiable that we already are not sharing and I would argue are not leveraging as effectively as we could. I'd much rather solve that initial problem first before thinking too much about that second problem.