Certainly we will continue to engage at every stage of this process throughout the CRTC consideration, throughout redefining CanCon and throughout implementing this legislation.
That said, good legislation is not about biting off as much as you possibly can and then setting some policy directions later. The scope that is still left open in this legislation is absolutely astonishing. We would much prefer to see some tighter legal limits applied before we move to that next stage, which would give us, and everyone in Canada, some confidence that this was not going to go very much off the rails.
Some of my colleagues here started talking about TikTok and how it has emerged fairly recently as a major force. TikTok is not broadcasting. It is very clearly individual user expression. The government has no business regulating content like that under this legislation.
For that matter, when we talk about who benefits under these systems, the majority of TikTok creators are creating for people outside of their country. That's true in English, in French and in most of the world's languages. The only way to force Canadians to consume mostly Canadian content through a system like that would be to really firewall them off from the rest of the world and that's not in anyone's interest. That's not even in the interest of Canadian creators who would be gutted and shut off from access to most of the rest of the world through that system.
Of course we'll continue to engage, but we think things like revenue targets and further limitations to exclude user content now are really important at this stage.