Well, I'm not an expert on all of those issues, but there are privacy issues, I think, and issues around the control of domain and location of service, and so on, that don't translate quite so easily into the traditional thinking around opening markets.
There are some very huge competitive advantages for economies that are first movers, either in IP, e-commerce, and so on, and I think there are arguments for the public good nature of information flows and of intellectual property that argue for a regime that allows less developed countries, including Canada, which is not always at the forefront of technological development, to benefit from those developments as well. I think of pharmaceuticals, for example. The length of time before pharmaceuticals lose their copyright and can be turned into generics is a very important issue for Canada and especially for developing countries, and we should be sensitive to that.