I actually think we have a better-news situation than perhaps we had, let's say, a year ago. I thought the CRTC hearings on net neutrality were quite good. I thought the guidelines the CRTC came up with were, in the main, pretty good as well. The fights you see taking place in the United States are largely around guidelines that could ultimately look much like what we have in Canada.
The issue, now that we have these guidelines in place, is whether we are going to have effective enforcement. I think the criticism about the net neutrality guidelines or the traffic management guidelines, from the very beginning, was about whether there was effective enforcement. We saw a baby step in that regard, so to speak, from the CRTC earlier this year when they took on the issue of disclosure. One of their requirements was that ISPs have to disclose their practices. ISPs are still not disclosing them in an appropriate fashion, and the CRTC wrote to the ISPs and said that it needs to change.
Even today we have all sorts of traffic management practices that I think are problematic and that need ultimately to be tested. We have those high-level guidelines, but what we need is actual enforcement to determine whether the guidelines can deal with some of these problematic policies. That's an answer we don't have yet and that's going to require some enforcement, something that I hope we see this year.