I do.
Outside of the governments of the world coming together, I think you're starting to see organizations such as the Messaging Anti-Abuse Working Group, with ISPs, ESPs, and private anti-spam organizations working together to really sort of push the envelope and ask how they as organizations can raise the bar where government falls short, and how can they prevent abuse from their own networks, or abuse coming into their networks. They're really working from the business side on how we can prevent that.
With the help of government, obviously, they're going to be able to take action. What you'll see then is that the cottage industry spammer, the small guy sitting in his basement sending SPAM, will disappear. That's what Australia saw. They'll disappear overnight because they're worried about huge lawsuits.
Where you have the problem is with these large organizations. There's the Canadian Pharmacy spamming, where the Canadian organization has now moved out of Canada but still spams in Canada, still uses the Canadian Pharmacy branding, and still sends products that don't work. But there's no action. We can't do anything about it, because they've moved to other countries or they've moved outside of the borders where this stuff's enforceable because they're worried about the types of actions that can be taken against them.