I think the minister said it quite eloquently.
Essentially, open government is about broader collaboration between the government, civil societies and Canadians. It includes elements of open information. Work has been done, for example, under the access to information regime to have more proactive publication. It includes elements of open data. Within my organization, for example, we have the open government portal, which pushes out a lot of information, such as a lot of geospatial information, which can then be reused by either civil society or the private sector for their own needs. It leverages ongoing collaboration with civil society through, for example, the multistakeholder forum that we've established, which brings civil society actors into the government to work with us on specific initiatives.
Some of the key tools we have are the open government portal, which is managed within the office of the CIO. Then, on a regular basis, we develop open government national action plans. We developed the fourth action plan and now are developing the fifth.