That was because of a class-action. We were involved in that class-action because our books had been digitized in US libraries. There were 170 countries and I don't know how many languages. In fact, we had two options. Either we accepted the agreement to take advantage of the few benefits it would produce, or we decided to withdraw from it. Our conclusion was that, if we wanted to protect the French-Canadian culture, we had to create a critical mass of works in our language and from our culture, to get money to digitize them quickly, and to teach our publishers how to digitize their works.
We set up an aggregator which allows us now to reverse the situation with our thousands of digitized works, our own collection. We have a very specific culture that is recognized. This allows us to have some negotiating power in order to work with the big online bookstores of the world such as Amazon, Goggle or Apple. We have even set up some agreements with several online bookstores. We already sell our digitized books online. Furthermore, we are on the verge of concluding agreements with Apple for our aggregator to be present everywhere.
This will ensure the blossoming of the French-Canadian culture through our digital strategy, one of the components of which was, last year, our withdrawal en masse from the Goggle agreement. Ninety-three per cent of our publishers withdrew, and their decision is celebrated all over the world.