Absolutely. This legislation sets the stage for the government, through the CRTC, to be able to decide what ought to be promoted and what ought not to be promoted as we view products online. So, yes, today the criteria might be Canadian, that is, whether or not something is considered to be Canadian content. However, I would note here that some of the programming decisions are very outdated. A film called Gotta Love Trump is actually considered Canadian content while The Handmaid's Tale is not.
There are lots of problems there. But what I would also say is, yes, there could be expansion. Today the government's talking about whether or not something is considered to be Canadian. We've heard Minister Mendicino talk about things like social cohesion. We know that the topic of online harms is coming down the pipeline, and so we're very concerned that this could create a mechanism through which the government could promote and demote certain Canadian content—what people are saying based on standards that are not just Canadian and that could go all the way to social cohesion, which is very vague and allows a lot of room for the government to make decisions like that.