I think there's value unquestionably in re-examining where the Broadcasting Act is. What this seeks to do—and I think we've seen this even in a couple of comments that my fellow panellists have made—is to claim that this is all one system, that the Internet is the same system as broadcast or television and radio, and that we can have the same rules apply. The problem is that it isn't. The long-standing policies we've had in broadcasting, for the long-standing broadcaster, have been premised on scarcity of spectrum, the privilege of having those licences and the requirement to give back.
The Internet is different. There are not the same kinds of requirements. There is far more expressive potential. There are far more opportunities for creators and for consumers alike. The problem is that when you try to put that square peg in a round hole, you end up with exactly the kinds of things that were mentioned, such as the inability, for example, to require Canadians to be predominantly—