From my own perspective [Technical difficulty—Editor]. I would be concerned about a Canadian-specific approach in technology and IP. The reason for that is to consider telecommunications.
Do you remember how, with Wi-Fi, it used to be almost impossible to do anything, and then a bunch of entities got together and really put a ton of money—billions and billions of dollars—into figuring out how to make Wi-Fi faster? We're into 5G now. That didn't come from a Canadian-specific standard. It's an international standard. That's how the world is working today.
We need to be open to international standards and not to set Canada-specific criteria. I'm quite different about that. Great ideas are great ideas around the world. The more we're involved in that, the better. If you're concerned about foreign ownership, then address that specifically, but don't limit the world growth of technology and the spread of technology and ideas.
I have a very different perspective. I'm very IP-focused on expansion, and we need to be part of that.