One of the core elements that we spent a lot of time focusing on during this negotiation was not to simply look at what's in the existing NAFTA and extrapolate some of that when it came to traditional areas like goods, services and investment. We wanted to modernize it by introducing elements that do not exist in the current NAFTA, including digital trade and much more of an emphasis on the economy of the future, rather than the economy of the past, which NAFTA, being 25 years old, is necessarily focused on.
We spent a lot of time on that modernization, and digital trade was a key part of that. We have a new digital trade chapter in this agreement that we did not have before. I think there are a few chapters of this nature in any free trade agreement around the world. We have agreed not to discriminate against or impose any kind of customs duties on online digital products. That has been an aspect of the international discussions for some time, but we've locked that in. We have ensured cross-border flows of information, minimizing data localization, and have been ensuring that we permit the necessary data protections that we feel need to be enshrined in an agreement in order for us to pursue these kinds of obligations.