I'm not sure the open by default policy necessarily will have the greatest effect on open data. The open data initiative is really pushing data sets out there so it would be like, okay, if you have new data sets that are developed, then that information will automatically be made public. But there are parameters around that as well, so again, relating to things like privacy and national security and making sure that you're not releasing data that has potential negative consequences.
I think perhaps a bigger impact of that open by default policy will be on more the unstructured information, so information that Canadians would typically get via the access to information system, access to information request. I think that's where you would probably see the primary difference. We do have, in our national action plan, a commitment to developing an open government directive, which, as I understand it, is leading us down a path of that open by default framework that's been adopted already in the United States. This was something that we had committed in our national action plan to having in place earlier this year, but it's one of the commitments we're actually a little bit behind on. We are ahead in some commitment areas and behind in some. That was one that we're behind in.