I would like to follow up on some of the comments that my colleague, Mr. Champoux, brought up.
We are hearing announcements of an $8-million contribution to Canadian broadcasting, and, of course, it was made public on the weekend, the day before you were to come before this committee. It's great to see this contribution to local media, but obviously it's a very small amount of money compared—as Mr. Champoux pointed out—to the amount of money that Facebook makes in Canada.
It also seems to me that it is not the right way to do this. Clearly this is not the right way to solve this media crisis. Instead of you or the big web giants choosing how to interact, it seems to me that the role of government is to introduce legislation, like Australia did, that would in fact force you to pay your fair share instead of you creating the rules that favour you.
Wouldn't you agree that rather than looking for handouts from Facebook on one-offs, doesn't it make more sense to have legislation in place that holds you to account on that?