Yes.
I think training and awareness are the key. The Canadian International Council, in its report Rights and Rents, called for the establishment of an IP czar, who would have a much broader mandate than the current head of the Canadian Intellectual Property Office to expand training and engagement programs in the private sector, both practically oriented as well as high-level policy engagement. I would endorse that recommendation. I think it's a very good one.
That's the answer: create more awareness. One of the things we need to create awareness of is that intellectual property can be a very important asset, and a sword for all companies, including SMEs. It can also be a land mine, which companies can inadvertently step on. Research In Motion is an excellent example. It paid $612.5 million U.S. to settle a dubious lawsuit brought against it by a U.S. company. It threatened to shut down the BlackBerry distribution in the U.S.—$612.5 million U.S. to a company that didn't even have a website. It didn't make anything. All it did was troll for patents. We have to understand the dangers as well.