Focusing on net neutrality itself, we can't control what other jurisdictions do on that, but it is a global concern. Different jurisdictions have taken different approaches.
With changes in the U.S., there obviously might be impacts on the application space and which applications will be successful and how much they might have to pay the Internet service providers in the U.S. It may raise their rates if they have to pay the ISPs down there. Whether they pass that on to other jurisdictions is up to them to decide. It won't change our approach to net neutrality in Canada and how we regulate the use of those practices in Canada.
There's no direct impact. I could see it potentially making more sense for some of those content providers to connect directly in Canada, versus transiting from other jurisdictions where the rules on net neutrality aren't as clear. You can see their having more interconnection directly into Canada, but there's been no indication that this may happen.