Quickly, Optik TV is really like a cable TV service. So it's not a content service; it's a distribution service. But it uses Internet technology, and it's licensed by the CRTC, so it has to meet all the Canadian content obligations. We now actually have 300,000 subscribers using this technology in Alberta and B.C., so it's very neat.
The second question was on Bell-CTV. This goes back to my point that it's not of material impact on us if the access to the programming that's protected under the Canadian broadcasting system is available to our customers, just as the Shaw-Global, the TVA-Quebecor, or the Rogers-City programming is. If we're excluded from accessing that programming, then we're unable to compete with the cable companies. That likely, if anything, apart from damage to us, keeps cable rates high.