I think there's no question that we'll see a constitutional challenge. We've had papers from a number of academics who have made the case in an analysis of how copyright sits within our Constitution. The further away you get from copyright and the more you become more focused on what you can fundamentally do with your own property rights, the less this becomes about copyright per se.
When you have legislation that basically dictates what an individual can and cannot do with their own personal property—I'm not talking about someone who seeks to infringe, but about their own personal activity and their own personal property—and especially when we bring in things such as basic access controls, it doesn't sound to many people as though we're talking about copyright law at all anymore. It's now about personal property rights, and frankly, that's within the jurisdiction of the provinces, not the federal government.