My opinion on that, as you've had other witnesses here in front of this committee say, is that Canadian industry is very slow to make these sorts of decisions in the first place. They see this regulation now, and they don't want to do things that are going to get them into trouble, so for sure there is some hesitation. In this country, we talk about the risk that AI is going to take people's jobs. At the same time, we talk about how we don't have enough people to do the jobs that we need done.
What AI offers industry especially—we're not talking about ChatGPT necessarily—is the ability to mechanize effectively the repetitive jobs that no one wants, the low-paying jobs, and to help upskill those people into the higher-paying jobs where we need human intelligence, human empathy and all that sort of thing.
What I want to continue to convey is that with this regulation we're trying to solve a lot of harms, but at the same time, we need to get help. We don't want to create another barrier for Canadian industries to come off the sidelines and begin to adopt AI to solve some of these problems they have.