That's a big question. Anything to do with the archives starts with the rights--artists' rights, creators' rights--that accrue to those properties, and that can be a significant consideration when we're thinking about it.
That said, when it's appropriate we build content from our archives into virtually everything we do. We don't do a news story that has profound implications for the country without some kind of historical reference. That content comes from archives. Similarly, archival products have a use in programming around current events and virtually everywhere in programming.
For a number of years we also, with the help of the Department of Canadian Heritage, worked on a digital archives website in both CBC and Radio-Canada. Its mission was to portray the history of this country and some of its events and characters in a digitally accessible and friendly form. At the end of the day, that's the good news about all of this.
The reality is that we do have huge archives, but access to those archives is restricted by two factors. One is the rights aspect that we talked about, and the other is simply the cost of digitizing that content and then mounting it on some kind of digital platform. Those are realities we deal with. We deal with them on a program and opportunity basis, and ultimately on a business basis. Parts of our archives are always being digitized as a result, but we don't have a comprehensive goal to digitize all of the content.