The real key, if I could just back up a little bit, is that the original intention, based on discussions with people who were involved in developing the original legislation, was to prevent charities from getting into things like slot machines, video lottery terminals, and so on and so forth. The legislation was framed 30 years ago in order to preclude that outcome when the agreement was originally achieved between the federal government and the provincial governments in terms of how lotteries would be managed on a national basis. This is sort of a classic case of a law of unintended consequences. What they were trying to preclude 30 years ago were VLTs and slot machines, and charities getting into that.
Today it's blocking us from using computers for entirely legitimate means such as issuing tickets and random draws in terms of avoiding the costs and complexity associated with putting, literally, a million paper tokens into a big Lucite drum, turning it with a motor, and physically reaching in. It takes us 15 days to do our draw because we have to draw 75,000 tickets. We're just trying to sort of catch up with the 1990s, let alone 2014.