Sure. Why don't I jump in? I'll just say right off the bat that I don't have an answer for you today. I apologize.
I think one of the challenges with providing a true response to that question is with respect to disclosure. I analogize to the traditional securities world and publicly traded company disclosure-requirement regimes as they exist and as they are evolving. My understanding is that regulators, primarily securities regulators, are working to enhance ESG-related disclosures for public companies, and those laws, I understand, have yet to take effect and have yet to have meaningful impact. However, that is an example of traditional legislation with respect to disclosure—whether it's around an individual asset or a market intermediary—that will be helpful for this space.
We are emerging and developing, but I think of WonderFi Technologies as a public company. As and when there are ESG-related requirements for disclosure for our company, we will be adhering to those and giving disclosure to the world. That will theoretically be the case with traditional financial institutions in, hopefully, the near term as well, and that will allow for a more meaningful comparator.
I am not as close to the ins and outs of the technology as some of my colleagues here on the panel, but I understand that the industry is working quite hard to reduce its carbon footprint. I don't have a true comparator, but I believe that information is coming as the regulation develops.