Yes, I think we need to bring those kinds of timing issues up to international standards.
But what I was trying to say is that we want the effects of this to be mitigated by other tools we could use to make sure. For example, I know everybody is thinking about pharmaceuticals, but too much patenting is not necessarily a good thing either. If you create patent tickets, people can't innovate because they're infringing on somebody else's innovation. We could play with that, as the U.S. has done in their recent patent reform, for example, to make sure we don't use a patenting system to prevent other people from using your own innovation down the road as the basis for something else. So those are the kinds of tools....
We can also look at the limit and at using competition tools to make sure products can get to the market efficiently once they're past the competition, so that you don't use your patent in an anti-competition way by preventing others from using your innovation and spreading it to the market.