Absolutely, sir.
As you read, the act provides for an exclusion on all of our journalistic, creative, and programming activities. Those words are not words that the legislator chose with no purpose. Those are the exact words that come out of the Broadcasting Act. So they've lifted that, and I assume, in the way the act was drafted, that they wanted to ensure the integrity of the activities of the national public broadcaster. That's very important.
I'll give you an example of one of our journalists, let's say in Quebec, doing an important probe on the construction industry, having a couple of journalistic sources, and these sources not being identified to even the management team at CBC/Radio-Canada. Under the Broadcasting Act, certain of the information that we have in our hands is not even available to our minister or the Minister of Finance, or is not disclosable because it's protected by these words. The example of our sources of information is, I think, the most obvious one.
Maryse, would you like to add something to that?