My understanding is that in Utah you had widespread abuse or attempted abuse of that provision. I think it was prisoners who were sending messages and then hoping to use that as an opportunity to file suit.
While I recognize that this seems like a concern, the experience we've seen in Canada is that our litigation environment is quite different from that in the United States. Things such as costs are different. Filing frivolous suits under a private right of action could well leave someone facing some of their own court costs, if they were to do that. We already have some disincentives built into the process.
When we look at the overall picture and at the number of large players who have wanted to target some of the Canadian-based spammers we have heard about, we see that they have been clearly unable to do so in Canada. Indeed, in the Facebook example—and we have seen it in other cases too—they have had to sue under U.S. law against Canadian-based spammers, because of the absence of legislation to deal with it here.