I have been saying this consistently. We have these two regimes: the telecom and the broadcasting. The telecom, as I say, is essentially market-oriented, where we step in for market failure, and it's an ex post sector regime.
On the cultural side, you will always have some sort of regulation because you are trying to achieve a cultural-social role. But we've done it with a very heavy bureaucratic hand. I want to make sure we do it as lightly as possible, that we interfere as little as possible, and do it in a targeted way, to the extent that their creative forces, their market forces, can be unleashed to produce. But I fully realize, since at the end of the day we're talking not about an economic goal but a cultural goal, there is going to be some sort of government intervention--let's put it that way.