It seems to me that on the issue of cultural sovereignty—and that's what we've been speaking about, that democratic voice, digitally, in a cultural space—there are two choices: we can either invest in the digital realm or we can try to impose laws to insist that people watch a certain percentage. If we look at Iran or China or Syria or any other country that has attempted this, I think it doesn't work. We have to get serious about whether we're going to take our cultural product and get it out there so people can watch it.
The question we have to ask is whether you are suggesting that changes are needed at the Canadian Television Fund so that if we put money into television programming we can insist that those programs will be shown on various platforms after the initial viewing.