As I mentioned, the squatting is happening on two levels. It's happening on the TV channels that we have left, channels 2 to 51, which will still be used for TV service. I mentioned that all the existing broadcasters still get to sit on a whole one of those channels for HD, and they don't even need it all for HD, so that's a problem.
Second—and this is the part of my presentation I didn't get to—the upcoming spectrum auction of channels 52 through 69, the so-called digital dividend that this is all about, is going to be finite, no matter what. We already know that what is driving the demand for more bandwidth is rich applications, and in particular video applications that Canadians will be able to consume with their cellphones on the move.
In our view, it's just a move from the unregulated broadcasting spectrum that you watch in your home on TV, and now we have less space for that and fewer channels available for new entrants. We're giving it all to people who are going to offer us more mobile TV so that we can watch all over the place. It's mostly going to be light entertainment, foreign fare, with no regulation whatsoever. At the moment, there's no move to regulate any of that.
We're asking—that was our fourth and last recommendation, which you can see when you get our presentation—that a percentage of that spectrum auction be held back for public use and public planning.