First of all, much of this again is covered in our brief in detail.
What I think is important and what we're suggesting again is that it is very important to us to make sure that we do due diligence on what has happened here and make sure that we understand all the implications and future implications of this transaction as it has been consummated or announced. That's what's important, because it's very natural--it's almost standard procedure in other countries--to check for these things on transactions of this magnitude that especially include fundamental R and D and technology that's going to be used in future international standards, that is going to be deployed widely within the country, and we need to understand what the implications are.
Again, I want to bring back something I said before. When we bought Certicom, a Canadian company buying another Canadian company in the same province, 100 kilometres away, it was still subject to the approval of the U.S. under national security concerns. So if that transaction was important to them, how come this is not important to us?