If I may take a quick step back, it's not that it's overly complicated. There are often comparisons made between Canada and other countries. The U.K. is one example. They license foreign services. We do not license foreign services in Canada; we authorize their distribution. In effect, the distributers, the cable companies and so on, will come and say that Canadians are asking for a particular service and that they'd like to carry it. Then it gets authorized.
In order to take it away, so to speak, we need to remove them from the authorization list. That has been a relatively rare occurrence, but it is increasingly a concern, and we do have the ability, as we just did. Typically it would be driven by a complaint from the public or an enterprise, a person in a legal sense registering a complaint, and then we would examine it, determine whether the matter needed action, get comment and ultimately render a decision.
I'm sorry that was a very long answer.