There's a concern less about re-monopolization than duopolization. There's a concern we'll end up with two big players, the telephone companies and the cable industry. We talked about that quite a bit on the panel, and there is a concern. We think it's the job of government policy, and the way we recommended is to ensure that barriers to competition for third and fourth and fifth entrants are removed, and that includes getting lots of spectrum out there for new competitors to allow them to enter the market, empowering the CRTC to allow new competitors to access utility poles and share tower space and all that.
So rather than having the regulator direct market outcomes, you simply remove the barriers to competitive entry, and that should get rid of the concerns about re-monopolization. Because telecom markets are so dynamic now and there are so many different potential routes to the customer, if you include satellite and wireless technologies in the mix, it should be possible to maintain a pretty vibrant non-duopoloistic regime, a truly rivalrous, competitive regime.