In terms of points to elaborate on, I think we are observing the policy process in action. There is consensus, both that people want action on this and that it is overdue as a policy priority.
We have heard from a range of stakeholders here today. It isn't about the “what”; it's about the “how”. It sounds very much as though, across everything we are talking about, this is actually the only intervention for which we are talking about people—everyday people, not corporations and not large foreign corporations. I am supportive of further exploration as to the precise implementation of how we articulate that in legislation so that people are comfortable with it and there is clarity. I would not want to rush forward with something that won't be beneficial.
To some of our other questions, even related to exploring these AMPs, this conversation also assumes that we can even prove a competition case in Canada and actually fine someone and fine one of these companies. Back when we fined Meta, then Facebook, which was brought up by Professor Quaid, again, to put that fine in context, it was less than an hour of Facebook's annual revenue for that year. Now I'm pulling at a fines question, but thank you for the opportunity to slightly elaborate.