You raise two issues that, for me, are very discrete. One is the future of television in this country, on which we have just finished a review. Later this year, we're going start a review on BDUs and specialty services, and that's where we address this globally.
On top of this is the point that you and several of your colleagues mentioned, the whole issue of new media and how we can confront it, etc. This will be one of my key preoccupations through my term as chairman, to deal with the new media; first of all, to understand what it is and how it is evolving and how we can adapt our present system—which has been very successful, as we have created a very vibrant communications industry in this country—to make sure the new media doesn't render us irrelevant or destroy what we have built. So that's the broad picture.
On the narrow picture, you call it a band-aid, I call a crisis. Whatever it is, it's the CTF issue, and we have to deal with it. There are confidential issues and there are public policy issues. We have struck the balance by saying let's do the fact-finding on a confidential basis, and let's do the discussion of the options and remedies and how to approve them on a public basis.
Thank you.