Yes, I think there's an important issue that we need to separate here. That's the issue of the use of technological protection measures in the marketplace and the use of copyright law to prohibit the circumvention of technological protection measures. Those are two very different things.
Currently, Canadian law is technologically neutral about the use of technological protection measures. It provides no provisions that either support or prohibit the use of these kinds of measures in the marketplace. That's why we have technological protection measures applied to all kinds of businesses, whether it's online streaming—audio or video—or whether it's e-books or DVDs: because there is no prohibition, and that, as far as I know, is not on the table for discussion here.
What we're talking about are legal protections or legal provisions that prohibit the circumvention of technological protection measures. So it's like an additional layer, and if you just imagine concentric rings of protection, we're talking about the outermost ring of protection here. That is one of the issues, or one of the potentially problematic points to raise or that may be raised in—