I'll start.
Certainly we can win the war against piracy, if we're provided with the right tools to win that war.
As I said earlier, there are over 40 countries around the world that have recognized and are confronting the same piracy problem we're confronting. The solution that they have adopted, which has had a 75% to 90% success rate, is having Internet service providers block access to that pirated content so it's no longer available to the consumer who wants to consume pirated content. It can be done expeditiously, efficiently, and at a much lower cost than having to go to court every time you find a pirate site.
If you look at the proliferation of pirate sites available on the Internet, under the current legal regime a producer or creator or broadcaster would have to go to court each and every time it wanted to get an order from a court to block one single source of piracy. Complicating that situation is that most of the pirate sites are located offshore. They operate online, anonymously. It's hard to find the defendant and hard to enforce when you finally get an order, and then they pop up somewhere else. It becomes an endless game of Whac-A-Mole, trying to stem the tide of piracy.
The answer, we think, is having Internet service providers like Bell and Rogers block those sites as they come in.