To add to that, I think the original policy was very object-based and very protection-based. Those are all very important things, since we won't be museums without objects—the human rights museum may be the exception—but we now need to turn it around on a really basic level in terms of our thoughts and ideas about places of celebration. We know our spaces are beautiful spaces in which people want to congregate and commune with art, but because we have so much strength in our protection of the art work, we don't allow for that natural social gathering to occur.
That's just one tiny, small example. As Robin indicated, the digital world and all of its myriad factors weren't addressed at all.