Thank you for the question. I'll give it a shot for you.
That report was authored by Professor Gillian Hadfield, who's the director of the Schwartz Reisman Institute at the University of Toronto. She's a Canada CIFAR AI chair, and I believe she was a witness at this committee last week or the week before.
As you can understand, Professor Hadfield is an expert in regulation and in particular has developed significant expertise in understanding AI regulation in Canada and internationally.
The policy brief that we published at CIFAR represented ideas that came from Professor Hadfield and her laboratory, her research associates and her colleagues, really looking directly at the need to be more innovative as we think about regulating AI. This is a technology that's moving very quickly. It's a technology with so many dimensions that we haven't explored previously in other regulated sectors.
I believe the point that Professor Hadfield and her colleagues were making was that as we think about regulating AI, we also need to be incredibly flexible, dynamic and responsive to the technology as it moves forward.