We do not. If I may say, by way of introduction, we have that jurisdiction today. Some might argue that it could be challenged in court, but the act as it is written relates to programming delivered over any means and we do not regulate it today. Most of those services are subject to an exemption order. The challenge for the commission is that we really only have two tools, which are outdated. We have the ability to license and the ability to exempt. You can't license a non-Canadian, for example. You can see that we're very limited in what we can do.
The commission's broadcast regulation is not focused on user-generated content. It's focused on the objectives of the Broadcasting Act. What we are interested in is what will have an impact on the system.
More than 20 years ago the commission looked at this and said that for services delivered over the Internet, their regulation would not contribute significantly to the objectives of the act. They looked at it again a little over 10 years ago and reached the same conclusion. I think we could probably all agree that it's not a reasonable conclusion now. It is a significant impact on the system. That's why I've said that we need the flexibility in order to do that.
But the focus is not on user-generated content. It is on the content broadly, provided by programmers, platforms—Canadian or otherwise—and so on.