Just to add to Ian’s comment, 65% of our funding comes from federal allocations, 35% comes from the commercial market. A crown corporation, the CBC is a journalistic organization, and you have to talk about the arm's-length relationship it's supposed to have with Parliament.
To answer your question—and your question I think at the same time, if I may—I guess it's not about what gets released; it's about who's asking for it. It's about who has access to that sensitive information. You spoke about the commissioner. The commissioner is asking for certain information and the CBC is taking the position—I can't speak for them, I'll let them defend themselves—that they would rather a judge do it, so we'll see what happens there.
The CBC is not the only government department currently in front of the courts, fighting the commissioner. I believe the Department of Justice is and one more that escapes me right now. It comes back to the debate that Karen was talking about and the discussion that needs to happen about ATIP and what is relative to the CBC. I think the CBC has to be “bubbled out” in a certain way and handled differently because of its operations, because it operates 35% in the commercial market, and because it's a journalistic organization and has to protect itself against its competitors at the same time. It certainly is confusing for me, and I can sure see why it's confusing a lot of folks and why we're asking the questions. But the CBC isn't the only one right now fighting the commissioner on these access to information requests.