Okay. The catalyst for this was the fall of the Stoddart empire in publishing. When Stoddart went into receivership, they were not only publishing books but they had general distribution under their umbrella, and that was the distribution of all of the books as well.
We tried to identify what the loss in royalties would be to the writers for all of the books that had been in the stores or were in warehouses, because writing, as you may or may not know, is basically a consignment industry. The books go from the publisher to the stores, the stores hold them for up to 90 days, and they have an opportunity to return them after that. So the sale has not happened for probably about six months from the time the book leaves the distributor until it is seen on a royalty statement for a writer.
When publishers go bankrupt--and Stoddart being the main one--millions of dollars are lost to the writers. The shippers, the bookstores, the printers, the book binders, all of those people can secure their credit status; the writer cannot. Yet he or she is the foundation of the industry. So by securing that status, we are able to ensure that at least after the banks, after the book binders, the writers will be in that list somewhere with some credibility.