Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to the witnesses today for their appearance.
I want to build upon what was already asked, but I want to put a bit of a different perspective on it. Mr. Stewart has been asking about some of those dual uses and the security issues around there. We know that the government moves fairly slowly, unfortunately, in comparison to something as quick-moving as AI and that technology.
We've heard repeatedly about the waning international co-operation in terms of the space domain. The United Nations was working on agreements around the protocols on the UN committee on the peaceful uses of outer space. That's had trouble. We've talked about the speed of artificial intelligence and the potential security issues.
I want to ask this: How is that all coming together? Do you believe we're making enough space—no pun intended—or making enough room for those internationally recognized guardrails?
In addition, Mr. Reid, you spoke specifically about the limited technologies or the limited capacity of what your technology does. Are there government regulations placed upon the use of AI? What do you face in terms of that? Do we need to do better?
That is a very big question. There is a lot there—I apologize.