Well, I think you have to distinguish between regions of the country where there's likely to be competition and regions where there isn't. Certainly I can speak better about British Columbia and Alberta. Just to give you a high-level sense, Calgary, Edmonton and the Lower Mainland represent about two-thirds of our population. So there are large geographic regions that may not see competition because they're not where the cable companies are. Cable companies choose where they will offer service, and unlike them, we have an obligation to serve everywhere.
Where there's no competition, nothing changes: CRTC regulation continues, consumers are protected by regulation rather than competition, and that's the end of it. This is really, I think, a debate about where competition will come, not where competition isn't.