Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you again to our witnesses here.
One of the issues we heard about in the United States concerned a difference with the Bayh-Dole Act. I'll start again with our visitors, Mr. Ring and Mr. Gold.
Does Canada need legislation that is a little bit more prescriptive? It may not be exactly like the Bayh-Dole Act, but is it enough just to build the superclusters themselves and then support them with financing? Or, do we also have to look at a legislative approach, either for information sharing or, I guess, a very clear set of rules that are modernized and identifiable for more of the internal but also the external innovation, namely foreign capital and so forth, that we might start?
I'll ask Mr. Ring to start and then Mr. Gold, and the go across the table.