Very serious questions to consider, indeed.
My first thought on this is that when we're talking from a digital media perspective, I think what we're saying is that there are models in the marketplace. And there are emerging models, especially with regard to Web 2.0, that could indeed help the CBC and provide additional avenues of funding without compromising regional access and equality of access to that.
I think we're in this interesting transition with the CBC where it's mostly been a push technology, mostly broadcast, that has been trying to serve an audience without necessarily knowing where that audience is and what it wants. What we're seeing in digital media is much more of a pull, for a push-and-pull relationship where user-generated content is very important to what's happening online and in digital media today. Through the development of a community worldwide in digital media, there have evolved different business models and different ways of funding that community, while still retaining equity of access.
So with regard to some of our comments earlier on, Net neutrality is definitely an important issue, but I don't think it's a linear equation. I don't think, in considering the role of the CBC, we can say that we need to address this first, and then this, and then this, because we'll have lost our opportunity. I think we have to look at both, and at the same time.