I'll have to take the question for Mr. Gray.
Radio doesn't do notice-and-notice. For that matter, neither does Bell Media. With respect to the way we view things, it's interesting when we hear that ISPs make money off piracy, because in fact the business of being an ISP is to make money on top-quality Internet service. By providing Internet service we're a common carrier, and as a common carrier we're neutral. That's decided by the Telecommunications Act.
We open the door to all kinds of things. We give you the ability to do whatever you like. You can check the weather, you can check a local business website, you can do downloading, as Mr. Del Mastro does, of legal content, of legal movies from wherever he gets them, possibly ITunes as well, which is legal content. But to make the assumption that ISPs have some kind of control over the Internet would be false. We can't control what goes on online, and we can't control what people do online. We're simply neutral.
We expect, though—from what we've seen and from the testimony earlier in 2011—that reaching out to individuals on an individual level is an excellent way to educate them on piracy. It is effective. I think our colleagues at Rogers gave testimony to that effect.