Thank you for acknowledging that.
I do think that somebody who is an expert in trade relations really would be better suited to speak to what the remedy would be under CUSMA. I will also flag that while it's only provisionally implemented, there are similar concerns with respect to CETA, so both of those regimes should be looked at. TRIPS doesn't go quite as far, but I think TRIPS also is a treaty that should be looked at.
Picking up on my colleague Ms. Stanley's comments, I think our submissions are not that the policy objectives behind the particular bill shouldn't be.... We take no position on the policy objectives. We're saying that from a technical perspective, we had a team of very seasoned copyright lawyers looking at the wording of the bill and we had trouble reconciling how it would actually operate, given other provisions, and ultimately, from a lawyer's perspective, we were concerned that if this bill is implemented, it's going to introduce a ton of ambiguity and also be ineffective, given that this seems to take a very discrete look. It uses plain language that is out of step with the rest of the Copyright Act.
Picking up on Dr. Rosborough's comment with respect to whether or not embedded products are covered in the first place, from our perspective, that's a non-issue. If he's in fact correct that somehow computer software embedded in a product is no longer computer software, then this is moot. This whole conversation is moot because we don't trigger the TPM protections in the first place, and there is clear case law in point that computer software does include embedded software.
I think we're speaking from a technical perspective. Looking at the specific wording of the act, it seems to not achieve the objective, and there are also implications under various treaties that should be considered as wording is looked at for the purpose of further amendment.
I'm sorry to go on.