Thank you. This has been a fascinating discussion.
Mr. Jamison, there's a book called Free: The Future of a Radical Price. Much of our discussion has been about the dangers of people using cultural goods they've never paid for. While I was in the magazine business for 12 years, for every magazine we sold, 10 people read it. That's a pitiful rate of return.
With respect to getting shelf space, our stuff was usually taken off the shelves and trashed before we ever sold anything. With many magazines I knew, rack space was almost impossible, so they had to find creative ways to sell. From what you've described, it seems that the Internet is creating phenomenal opportunities for Canadian magazines, not just to hold their own and find markets but to find international markets.
How do you see the role of digital in terms of equalizing the playing field that has been skewed against small magazines in this country?