The one thing I would imagine is that you will have the Canadian industry also demanding parity. That's a small thing. I don't think that would be good for consumers for reasons I've suggested or for the country, but it may be something that is demanded.
I think that's maybe the most important. Sometimes things become standard in the United States that aren't necessarily good and have a way of making their way up to Canada. You haven't quite had our problem with mortgage-backed securities, but I'm sure there's always pressure for things to become adopted in Canada that have become standard in the United States, like four-down football. They held on and resisted on that one.
More specifically, the degree to which Canadians have also benefited from an open and diverse Internet will become challenged. I'm thinking about Wikipedia. There's some statistic—I don't know what—that a disproportionate number of Wikipedia editors are Canadians. It sort of fits the personality of Canadians, I think, in some ways to be interested in truth and work hard behind the scenes. If Wikipedia begins to suffer because it doesn't have the money it needs to pay off the phone and cable companies, I think that could hurt something that a lot of Canadians are very vested in.