Well, we've touched the surface of how far we should go into this, but obviously these are industries. It's like book publishing and sound recording. It's sort of a long list of industries. In fact, what you want to secure is a capacity to create content and to have policies and measures to support content, ether production or access of distribution. But how do you define that? Is there a need for an opening line that says that everything that has to do with original content that is Canadian and meant to be made accessible either...should it be or could it be technologically neutral? I don't have the answer to that; I have a question.
In terms of telco, broadcasting, and so on, these serve various functions in terms of distribution and access, maybe not in terms of content production. Therefore, even telcos will eventually rely on broadcasters and producers and sound industries to produce the content that goes on their wires. So could you say they're part of the package or not? Probably not, because they're carriers. They're not producers of content.