I'll take a shot at that, and let Greg finish.
Obviously that's something we monetize and sell, in terms of providing that information. I suppose to the extent it almost became competitive with that, then perhaps that wouldn't be a positive thing. I think, though, there's probably a difference. With exchanges and clearing houses like ours, which use actual transactional data that is electronically captured, and you're talking thousands of transactions per day, rather than surveys and that sort of thing, I think it's just a different type of information.
If that were assimilated by Stats Canada or anybody else, I'm not sure that would be competitive. I think there are other publishers out there who do use surveys and gather data through informal sources, etc., and they may be more impacted by it.
I think the overall transparency is good for all businesses—the more known they are, the more they're out there, the more available they are. It would probably be a fine line at what point it starts to compete with businesses that, as I say, charge folks for that data.