Mr. Miao, I'm looking at it in terms of perhaps what the U.S. has done—because they have some legislation—and what we can do in Canada. Would it be something that we have to do under the Copyright Act, or is there something else we're going to have to look at in terms of the two sides of this situation?
One is looking at warranties and the legal protections the manufacturers have under warranty, and two is enforcement. Either we enforce that, or the law changes to allow a third party to go under a warranty for a competitor or for a company. An example I'm going to give is that Tesla is known in the U.S. for not allowing others to work on their systems, but also, there's no enforcement. When Tesla doesn't allow others to work on their systems, that's not followed, and there's no enforcement and no penalty for people who go around that prohibition.