Yes, absolutely. We don't oppose vertical integration, but we do, as I suggested, think you want safeguards to ensure that all Canadians and all independent producers and all competitors have an open access to the platforms, and that's probably a small price to pay for that level of integration. It's a huge global opportunity, but I would say there's one thing critical in all of this. I'll step out of my own business hat for a second and speak on behalf of some of my friends in the independent production sector. As you get into concentration, there are fewer windows of opportunity for an independent producer of film or television to find exhibition space for its wares on the traditional platforms. In today's environment, the traditional platforms still generate most of the money that then helps finance the ability to distribute that content on the Internet. If it doesn't get on television in the first place; it never really gets screen time. So that is a critical thing.
I absolutely believe we have to turn regulation on its head and say that with the Internet you have the operative in broadband; we have the opportunity to reach markets of such scale that we may never have to subsidize businesses again. But you have to start in your own marketplace by ensuring that the producers of the content have access to the networks we have without interference in that for competitive or strategic reasons of the network carriers themselves.