That's really difficult. Different jurisdictions have approached it in different ways and I've been looking primarily at the national levels. I think really interesting things are going on at the municipal and provincial levels but most of my research is focused on the national level. If I look around at what's been going on in other countries, I've certainly seen some other initiatives that were really interesting. The U.K., as one of the committee members noted, led the charge towards the open licence, so we're looking to other countries like the U.K. and the U.S. and modelling some of our initiatives on them. So in terms of best practices we can say that's happening. There's the open licence as an example, and the open by default from the U.S. where we're modelling our open government directive on that.
One thing the U.K. has also done that was really interesting is a big data audit of their data holdings, and in addition to publishing a range of data sets they've also published the list of unpublished data sets. They've been very transparent with society to say, look, this is what you have, this is what you don't have. It gives them a mechanism to refer to and to go through and say maybe we can work on releasing this and this in the future. So there's a very clear understanding of what's there.