Okay. Very good.
I want to ask everybody here, as I asked the previous group, about the 10 days to unsubscribe.
I think what happened today--as sometimes happens in debate--is that some of those in the business community who use this mode of information and technology have it upside down. You know, really, you're privileged to be able to send an e-mail to my computer, which I pay for, with the service that I pay for so that I actually get the capacity to send that information, whether it be high-speed or whatever it might be. It's your privilege, then, to actually put something on my communications systems.
I think that's where I come across, from a consumer's perspective; there's a sense of responsibility there. If I'm going to give you access to my system, through my service that I'm paying for, and if I decide later to unsubscribe....
We heard 31 days, but I have a hard time believing that you can't get off the list for 31 days. There's also the 10 days.
Maybe I can hear from everybody briefly in terms of what you think is reasonable.