Okay.
Professor Azzaria, I'd like to ask you about that, because much of our pressure has come from the U.S. trade interests. This past July, U.S. courts ruled that in fact there were problems with their own DMCA legislation in how it dealt with the fair use provisions, because the technological protection measures aren't rights in themselves. They're enforcement measures, so they're more like adjunct rights. So even the U.S. courts have decided that those adjunct rights don't trump the rights that exist for U.S. citizens, and fair use is much broader in the U.S. than it would be under fair dealing.
Do you believe we could have provisions in terms of our technological protection measures that would be internationally compliant but would also protect, where it is reasonable to protect, the rights that citizens have?