It's difficult, because it's a complicated chapter. It's one of the more complicated chapters of the agreement.
Digital services are becoming much more important for our economies, but there are areas where there's a lot of surveillance. There's a lot of abuse of children, for example, in the algorithms we see when we're looking at TikTok and other systems. In order to crack down on that and better regulate that, you need access to the source code sometimes. You need access to the algorithms.
CUSMA makes that difficult or potentially impossible. It's not been tested yet, but the language is new. There's a prohibition on governments accessing that information in order to regulate or put products on the market. I think we need to revisit that. There are a lot of cases. Even to help tax the companies or figure out how many of their sales they're generating in Canada, you sometimes need the source code and the algorithms to go through and figure that out.
There are elements of the digital trade chapter that I think are there to completely benefit big tech companies in the States. They don't help our companies or Canadians. We should be revisiting them.