I'm not sure that I can really answer that question. We're looking at a broader thing.
For quality of service, I guess the one aspect I can speak to is people who are using broadband for data or text transmission, in particular, who have disabilities and with VOIP can really benefit from the many different kinds of communications and transmissions that can occur. If quality of service is not maintained at a very high standard, there can be degradation of the actual communication that's received--packets get lost--and the quality of service itself can be extremely detrimental for people with disabilities. Our pitch, primarily, is that social regulation not get lost.