I'm not very far away, I don't think, from Mr. Hennessy's position. You have to realize that the CRTC has put in a regime of the type he's talking about for linear television. For linear television, we have to offer Sportsnet, which is owned by Rogers, to ExpressVu, to Telus, to Shaw, and if they're not satisfied with the price, until recently they could take it to arbitration. Sports has now been carved out of that regime, but most services they can take to arbitration.
That sort of heavily regulated regime in which there is no exclusive content is the rule today for linear TV. What we're exploring in the hearing in the spring is whether the same rules should apply to mobile phones and Internet.
One of the complications there is what to do about totally unregulated Internet providers. What if FIFA, whom you can't regulate—the soccer people—sell an exclusive to Jump TV or to Hulu Canada? The CRTC has never regulated those people.
You have to worry about a system that regulates the people who are already in the broadcasting system and leaves everyone else unregulated. But conceptually, the idea that all distributors should get access to the content is one we support.