No. The concept in the late 1990s of collection of proxies by telephone came in. The technology suddenly hit about 1997, 1998, and CBCA companies weren't allowed to do it because the act itself prevented it.
One of the things we changed was the rules. You're looking at the principle. What do you want? You want people to be able to participate. Does it really matter if they're in a room together, on a computer, on a conference call, or in a chat room, those kinds of things? What we did with the 2001 amendments is make it clear that if you're going to participate in a meeting, you have to be able to hear everybody else and participate meaningfully. But the act is not going to tell you how that happens. We went very generic: we simply said that as long as you meet the principles, it's up to you to determine how you want to run the meeting, whether it's one person electronically, ten people, or everybody.