The confluence of those technologies, right now, as we've talked about, is driving economies and connecting people. If you can have nations fall because of collaboration with social media...the power of it is immense. Not to recognize that and the benefit of that within the context of operating a business is a barrier for Canadians to adopt new technology and also compete. Other nations are driving that out, that ability to collaborate new and different ways at a corporate level. Wherever we are, it is a globally connected world. Once you touch the Internet, you're going through many different countries.
Data at rest versus data in motion is a very different thing. If you have a laptop and you travel to the U.S. and you're doing e-mail, your data is going all over the place. It is a reality. Without a strong message from this country to not look at what's happened in the background here in Ottawa, where I've grown up, and to look at the tech and where that's disappeared to, I think we deserve to be right at the front of that leadership, and we need that from the top down. We also need a decision on a policy that will drive us to embracing these technologies. The government needs to be the adopter of that, as well as an example.