I share your concern. Again, the frameworks within which those commercial organizations are operating will differ from those of individual states. State governments, particularly Canada and its partners and allies, will require very robust agreements with those commercial entities. I am not fundamentally convinced that this will ever be entirely sufficient. Ultimately, the state will have to rely on an entity that has potentially different interests. That's unless we end up constricting ourselves to only working with companies from our own states, and I don't think that would be particularly helpful.
That commercialization component does concern me. Fundamentally, Canada, with its allies and partners, really needs to articulate its point of need in the space domain to understand what capabilities are required and to understand who is best positioned to provide those. Part of the conversation around who is best positioned to provide them is about understanding the interests of the private entity behind them.
I share your concern. I think the issues with Starlink in Ukraine should act as a wake-up call, if you like, for that potential future challenge.