Thank you very much, Chair, and thank you very much to all of the witnesses. I wish we had more than seven minutes to spend together here.
In particular I note, David and Martin, that you have quite different views on the exclusion of goods in transit. I'd love to see the two of you debate that a bit further. I'm going to move on to something else, but if either of you want to send the committee further details on your perspectives on that, I'd sure welcome them. Because it's the same disagreement we heard about earlier, when we had testimony from the Intellectual Property Institute of Canada and from Michael Geist. They took quite opposite positions as well.
Martin, you represent manufacturers, small, medium, and large. If a shipment is held up at the border on the suspicion that goods may be counterfeit, when your manufacturers are all dealing with just-in-time delivery for parts, if those goods aren't counterfeit, how will they recover from the lost time of the goods being held up? Are you concerned about the fact that whereas there's no liability for the government in any of this, and the bill's quite explicit about that, there's no way for your members to actually be compensated for their potential losses?