I can turn to my colleague here, too.
I'd say there are two things. Again, there are the Industry Canada requirements. Before we even launch a new satellite, in the first instance we have to make the capacity on that satellite available to Canadian users, and we literally take out advertisements in the paper. It's a small sector of the folks who use satellite services, so we know them anyway.
Look, we don't need a government requirement to tell us to sell our satellite services to Canada or anywhere else; we have a strong economic incentive. But even apart from the economic incentive, there are the regulatory requirements in our licences from Industry Canada to, in the first instance, make our capacity available to Canadian users. Then there are the provisions in the Telecommunications Act, which the CRTC administers, to make sure that over time, to the extent that Canadian users require our capacity, and it's been made available elsewhere--the CRTC has the ability to effectively pre-empt the non-Canadian user; we have to make the capacity available to the Canadian user. The CRTC also has the authority to set rates. It is largely forborne from doing that, given that the market is competitive, but there are provisions in the Telecommunications Act that should the CRTC choose to enforce, it can, and it can set rates as well.