Media concentration is obviously a concern. Diversity of voices is one of the things we have to encourage as part of our mandate under the Competition Act.
You are looking at the one side, which is the concentration of media. We also, at the same time, have an explosion of fora in which you can express your views. When you look at whether major radio stations combine or not, and at whether this restricts the diversity of voices, you have to take into account at the same time that there are new avenues—I don't have to say the Internet, but blogs, and all of those—whereby people can express their views and communicate, and they do. We also look at the economics; we look at the market, etc.
In the decision we make on whether to approve, clearly one of the ingredients is diversity of voices. It's not the only consideration, but it's a very key and important one.
If we were still in the yesteryear, where we had very few outlets of communication for our voices, this would be a great concern. In our multi-platform world, this concern has to be looked at in that context. Therefore, what may at first blush sometimes appear to be a dangerous concentration does not on closer examination so appear, when you consider all the alternatives.
I'm just speaking generically. I'm not speaking about your specific case.