Again, I don't have enough details about what has been negotiated, what the contested points are, but fundamentally it's this. We mustn't put in place provisions around e-commerce and IP that hinder trade rather than advance trade. The whole point is to advance trade.
If you're putting in place more restrictions on IP that make it more difficult for trade to take place, more difficult for innovation, more difficult for start-ups to take place, then I think you're running against the purpose of a free trade agreement. All you're doing is protecting the vested interests of the established players.
What it boils down to is that Canada needs to focus on a made-in-Canada approach to intellectual property and e-commerce that's in Canadian interests and which values the importance of the free flow of ideas and the free flow of knowledge to the benefit of populations around the world.