Yes. Bill C-244 allows you to circumvent a TPM for the purpose of a product that would make something...or allow you to have a device that would diagnose, maintain and repair. There's an ability to circumvent a TPM to accomplish that. With my bill, the circumvention of the TPM is so that you can access the information you need to make your product interoperate. The information you would be getting to make your product interoperate wouldn't be used for right to repair. It would only be to make your product interoperate with another.
Again, it's trying to get the signalling information from a combine to make all the components on your header work. That way, you can change the speeds. Just the way technology has changed, a header is a lot more complex than it used to be. You need that signalling information.
That's what these companies are looking for. This bill enables them to circumvent a TPM to get the signalling information they need to make their product work, whereas right to repair is to get the data you need to be able to diagnose, maintain or repair a product.