Just quickly, I'd say that it's a law of general economic application that applies across the entirety of the economy. It will modify behaviour as it relates to how people approach the overall actions they're going to take in areas in which competition has a really big bearing. That's things like mergers and acquisitions.
It also sets the rules for a number of these private rights of actions in terms of abuses of dominance, and some of the real concerns in the marketplace.
I think, as the deputy has noted, some of that's going to be immediate. We're going to have mergers that people will look at and say, “Well, under the new rules, I'm not sure that's going to happen.”
Some of that will happen over the medium term—things like the increase to the look-back period for “killer acquisitions” in the digital space. This is adding the time period in which the bureau has the capacity to look back and say that that actually was a really important technology, and that was a major company coming to rout out competition by buying this up. That's the kind of thing that will have a more significant impact over the medium to long term.