I'll answer on two fronts.
First of all, many of the standards we do are referenced in regulation, so that regulator would enforce the use of that standard within their regulatory regime. So that's one piece. We'll write a standard, but we're doing a standard that will be referenced in regulation. For instance, Transport Canada will have a number of standards referenced in regulation, and it's Transport Canada that would enforce those regulations.
The one place that we do play a role is that we certify that your product or company is meeting the standard. So we do certification. We'll remove the certification if you can't meet the standard that you are trying to apply. So that's the place we play a role, but it's not an enforcement role. It's really a certification role, and that's true for all the standards organizations. They will remove their name or their label from that product. So, for instance, if I take anything that's in procurement, if you don't meet the standard, you will not be able to sell to the Government of Canada. So that certification process is how you allow access to the industry. But we don't do enforcement, and the enforcement really falls upon the regulatory agencies that use the standards, and therefore enforce them.