Thank you.
I thank you all for a fascinating discussion. We could go on for hours with this, but we'll have to limit our questions.
Mr. Hennessy, when I was looking at the Google-Verizon deal on content and non-interference of content, what disturbed me was that there was suddenly talk of the “public” Internet as though wired technology was the public Internet, meaning wireless was not part of the deal. Yet more and more of our content, as you can easily tell us, is being distributed wirelessly, in new platforms.
In Canada now we're looking at a situation where the content creators, who are backed up by hundreds of millions of dollars of Canadian taxpayers' money through the CMF, are now basically being run by a phone company and by a couple of cable companies. How do we ensure that we don't have preference on certain content over other content, or that new digital markets or new digital players are able to access content that might be controlled by, say, Bell-CTV and you're a competitor? If your people want to go on there and watch the CTV movie on Telus, how do we ensure that we don't have these vertically integrated giants using their power in an anti-competitive manner to limit access to content?