First of all, I think this is a good-news story for business, not a bad-news story. There are many businesses that want to rely upon electronic communication and have been undermined by the extent that spam has become a problem in this country. This, I think, will go a long way towards dealing with that issue. Think, for example, of the Canadian banking industry, which has invested very heavily in electronic banking only to find that the phishers have sent out a lot of messages purporting to come from the banks, which are suddenly now sending out messages to their customers warning them not to respond to these messages. That's not good for business and for the huge investments that have been made in that industry. So I think this is good news for business.
Unquestionably, there are going to be some sectors that in the past have been able to send out all sorts of messages—I think ultimately undermining confidence for others—which are going to face a problem. I believe your colleague Mr. Wallace, on Tuesday, recognized that in the context of real estate agents. If I want a real estate agent, I'll contact a real estate agent. I think specifically that when someone is selling a house, what they don't want is twenty spam messages from every real estate agent in town. That's a feature of this legislation; it's not a problem with it.