Sure.
I think on the first question about the consumer idea of confidence, we've heard from the businesses and from consumers around they need to have reassurance about the cloud services. Their service provider needs to be there to make sure that the pictures are there, that the other content is there, when they require them and that these will be safe for them.
It's a little paradoxical when you start to look across different services and you ask people, “Are you concerned about your privacy?” and they say “Yes.” “Are you concerned about location?”and they say “Yes”. “Do you know the location of your service providers?”, and they say, “No”. So how do you balance that type of conversation with individuals and determine how much risk they're actually accepting, the risk that is there, and the safeguards they are putting in place? It is a question of safeguards, because there are no legal prohibitions going across the community.
I think when we start to look at the business side, there are impediments around access to information and data that exist within cyberspace. So when we look at anti-terrorism legislation in Canada, and in the United States, and even in the U.K., for that matter, they all provide the ability to access data that are of interest to national security. So as you look to establish one of these capabilities within your region, people from outside the region will be concerned about the local governments being able to access their data using some of these lawful access procedures.
I have had conversations with other nations looking to establish themselves as world leaders around the provision of cloud services, and they look very closely at local legislation. They've asked, “How did your privacy legislation attract jobs or businesses to your region?” Unfortunately, there are no statistics kept on how PIPEDA or the Privacy Act have brought industry and businesses to the region.