I don't, and it's difficult. If I look, for example, at this first page that I received under the Access to Information Act, large amounts of it are redacted. There are clearly many stakeholders there, with contact names. Some are included, some are not. Even in terms of the list of those that signed NDAs and made that available, some of it's confidential, some of it's made public. Then, of course, these are private consultations. We don't know what happened.
As an example, the telecom industry is an area that I focus on a lot. It's quite possible that a discussion with telecommunications companies would have implicated some of the issues that I just talked about. Notice and take down, for example, or notice and notice, the role that an intermediary plays where there's an allegation of infringement on their network, is something that is presumably of direct concern to a telecommunications company. Was that discussed at the November 2012 meeting? Did they gain information as to what Canada's position is, what other countries' positions are? I don't know. They're not talking. In fact, they can't talk, because they've signed these NDAs that preclude them from doing so.