There too, I think, the concern is that we see today on the Internet this incredible diversity of content out there. It's always striking that the biggest proponents of net neutrality, especially among some of the successful Internet companies, weren't always big, successful Internet companies. In many instances, they were the small players trying to become the large players, and they often make the case, and I think justifiably so, that if they tried to emerge in a non-neutral world, one in which the established players at the time could have used either their deep pockets or economic might, or whatever advantages they have, to consign them to a slow lane or make it more difficult for them to compete in the marketplace, they might have not emerged successfully.
The ability of the public to access, and for some of these newer news services to emerge, raises some of those same kinds of challenges.