I'm happy to address that.
One of the things I mentioned during my speech was that the World Food Programme is leveraging blockchain technology to ensure that people are fed and that the misappropriation of funds cannot happen. This is a prime example of how blockchain technology can be used for a lot more than just shifting numbers. Yes, things are sent to a place, but then to utilize that technology when you are going to a food haul or something of that nature, there's a physical link there beyond just accounting in the back end.
Where we see an incredible shift in how we view Internet products and how blockchain will influence those is really in the data that underpins all of the these massively popular social networks. It's a reimagining of how these new applications can be reformed. Owning your own data is going to be crucial to seeing how we can grow beyond the Facebooks and the Instagrams of today.
It's incredibly important to look at this technology as the spine or the plumbing that will inevitably lead to a more user-owned Internet. Is that very obvious right now? Unless you're inside of it, it might be hard, but hopefully, after today, you'll all be on board with that vision of what we can do here in Canada for Web3.