I can tell you, Joseph Boyden is one really good example of that.
He, for one, said he was indigenous. He said he was Métis first, which he's not. He's claiming that he's Métis, but according to our definition, he is not Métis. Then he went to indigenous knowledge keepers and asked and listened to their stories. I don't know the process that went on. Maybe he told them he was going to write a book about it. Then he took that information and he wrote it down in a book and made a lot of money off it. He won awards.
That is a really good example of how traditional knowledge needs to be safeguarded for those very reasons. He might have done it in a very honourable way, but you can see from the backlash of the indigenous community in Canada that it is not acceptable.