No to the specific question you've asked, but certainly not no to the general trend.
We're tackling this across magazines, books, and audio-visual, in terms of the challenge of emerging technologies and how we get there. Our objectives in the department and across the culture portfolio are to support the creation of culture, which we have good mechanisms for, and also the access. This is where the new platform is played, on the access front.
It's quite interesting, though, that we have a number of institutions that can also play a role in this. We have the National Film Board that has a wonderful collection and is working on that. Yes, we have the CBC and their archives, and we have programs with Canadian culture online, where we partner with other departments and other agencies, including the CBC, to help them digitalize their content, whether it's for the virtual museum or other tools. So we are there, trying to support this.
Is it just for the CBC? There are other collections available. Library and Archives Canada is doing a lot in this realm as well.
We have noted with a lot of interest what the BBC has done. It has put a great deal of its digital information online in Britain. The philosophy behind it is that since the Britons have paid for it through their licence fees, it's a form of collective wealth.
Those are interesting ways of getting Canadian content distributed through new platforms. We have a piece on that particular aspect that we can maybe share with you with respect to the BBC, but we have a lot of institutions that could play a role in this, not just CBC and Radio-Canada.