Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you, everyone, for being with us this afternoon on our first day back in this session. Just before I start, I want to welcome our new members across the table here and pay a quick tribute to Mr. Ritz, who not only left the committee but actually left the House. We wish him well in his future endeavours. He was always a vociferous advocate of the positions he held, but we appreciated his contribution to the committee. I speak for myself, and perhaps everyone on the committee, when I say that it was a pleasure to work with him for the almost two years that we worked with him. I expect from our three new members just the same vigour that Mr. Ritz provided.
Back to the substance at hand here, I want to follow up with Professor Geist on the notice period. I know there's a merit to both systems. Each country has its own interests that it wants to protect. In an ideal world, how would you see a system working that would protect these interests but also allow for some fair use without being subject to fraud, and actually be a viable system in place that would reach all of the goals that it ought to reach?