That's a good question.
When we gave our opening statements earlier, we referred to the 4,000 members of the North American Equipment Dealers Association. These are all the companies in Canada and the United States that are impacted by restrictions on their ability to do business by being locked in to a single vendor and by restrictions on their freedom to choose what products they offer and don't offer. I think that's what's at stake here.
From a Canadian perspective, as manufacturers of that equipment, we're absolutely dependent on interoperability. If we cannot have interoperability through this legislation or other legislation that mandates it for products sold in Canada, we have to have some way to reverse-engineer to create the interoperability that's required, with the understanding that we're not interested in their intellectual property and all these things. We're asking for the external interfaces to be fully defined so that we can create this interoperability. To whatever depth we have to dig to achieve that information requirement, we need to be able to do that legally, and that's our biggest concern today.