Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I have to agree with Ms. Leslie that we're very fortunate to have your expertise here today.
As much as I almost feel like being enticed into a further discussion on Madam Lavallée's point from the opposite perspective, I'm going to set that aside and just go to some of the questions I'd like to ask.
You spoke briefly in one of your interventions on the concept that it was going to become impossible to differentiate between broadcast in broadband or access to the Internet the information that we receive through the various pipes. As broadband becomes accessed through means for which there are no longer any wires—that typically is the case these days, although the home still does rely on some wiring—once perhaps our home-based set-top boxes that deliver our television content and our Internet content begin to be able to access wireless networks, do you envision an environment where those wireless networks are accessible by all our devices here domestically and those wireless networks could be coming from abroad? If that is the case, can you give us a sense of what that environment would be like for being able to attempt to rein in content restrictions?