In terms of replication, they may be. Again, this is why it's useful to think about the behaviour itself and the implications for businesses and consumers.
It's unique in Canada. Earlier, one of your colleagues was asking about contextualizing Canada in that international context. Something we do that's kind of special, in the Canadian way, is that we've decoupled the Competition Act and competition federally from consumer protection considerations provincially. Australia blurs these together.
When we remove that consumer lens from competition issues, it makes it a bit harder for us to talk about some of these issues, because you're right. Are other platforms doing this? Yes, but it's harder to know. It takes a lot of homework and research.
Small businesses might feel it, and they do. The work that Denise has been doing in the U.S. has illuminated that, often, these small, independent businesses are afraid to speak out and to talk not just about the experience of being potentially copycatted but about all of those other coercive contract terms that we mentioned in that laundry list in our opening remarks, because of the ramifications to their businesses.
I don't know, Denise, if you wanted to follow up there.