Well, in terms of quality, what we're trying to figure out in our studies is this. We ask people who are on the various platforms why they're there, what they are consuming and what brought them there in the first place. I think quality is going to be picked up in these two different measures when it comes to the allocation phase.
In the first phase, we're trying to figure out how much value is being generated by proxies, i.e., how much time is being spent consuming news and what brought them there. In the second phase, we're trying to allocate according to two measures. One, at least in the U.S., is the amount of traffic you generate, your pro rata share of traffic, which in part will be a measure of quality. Two, and most importantly, our Congress has set aside 65% of all the proceeds to be allocated in accordance with each news publisher's pro rata share of journalists under their employ. That is a direct measure of quality, right? The more journalists you have under your employ, the bigger the share or slice of the revenue pot you're going to receive.
I feel like that's a way to get at this quality issue: Make sure that the award is allocated in accordance with the number of journalists. After all, at the end of the day, what we're trying to do is breathe life back into journalism. The way we do that is by incentivizing the publishers to go back and hire journalists, just as they have in Australia and other places that have received this recent infusion of cash.