We worked with the Privacy Commissioner on this very issue, and they were satisfied that posting information about where and when we would be driving, and making that available publicly and to the media, was a sufficient notification that would satisfy them that our obligations under privacy law would be met. I should say that when you think about the extent of publicity that the collection of the Street View data got, I think that's borne out. What I say sometimes when I talk to people about this is, this is the best-publicized cartographic collection in the history of the country. The fact of the matter is there are competitors of ours who have similar-type services, street-level imaging services of communities in Canada, and you might not know about those ones, even though they've undertaken similar types of notices with the media under the direction of the Privacy Commissioner.
Because Google is a big company, we get lots of media attention, but the fact is that the collection of this Street View data in particular got incredible amounts of media attention, and at the end of the day the commissioner, as I understood it, was satisfied with that.