You've made all sorts of statements here. I'll have to take them one by one.
First of all, we have a booming telecom sector. I don't think we're a digital backwater at all. We are leading. We're also leading in terms of the regulatory. For instance, last year we were the first country in the world to make a ruling on net neutrality or Internet traffic measures, which was widely copied around the world. So we are not a backwater.
Secondly, in terms of Internet traffic, there are no caps for business. If you want a business, you go and you make your deal with your provider, depending on your use. We're talking only about residential here, and I made that clear.
On the rules for residential, I think the best analogy is the cellphone. For your cellphone you do not have unlimited use unless you pay an extraordinary amount for it. Usually it's a plan that tells you how many minutes you have per month, or how much texting, etc., and if you go over it....
So that's a function of pricing in the market, and the same thing here; if you really want to have huge usage of your cellphone, and use it for all purposes, your cellphone bill will be much higher than mine, because I only use mine when I don't use my land line. That's the choice that you all make.