Thank you for clarifying your question. I now understand what you are getting at.
That has already happened. As I mentioned in my opening remarks, RISQ was in the beginning created with the intention of using a communication protocol called TCP/IP. This protocol was not available on commercial networks in the 1980s. Today, however, it is the most widespread protocol on the planet, including in the telecommunications industry. RISQ however continued to manage its network and will continue to use and promote new protocols of this type over the course of time.
We are not necessarily linked. We play the role of early adopter and we can even test new technologies. Take, for example, universities whose engineering departments include telecommunications researchers. Once these protocols have been tested, their adoption by the industry represents a second phase. But this does not threaten the existence of our network per se.
As long as we are the owners of an optical fibre infrastructure, we are free to use the equipment and the protocols that we want, including to test new protocols.