Yes, there is. I agree with you that if we did open up the market, in ten years we could find ourselves with our major telecommunications companies being majority-owned by foreign interests.
In reference to what you were asking about the relationship between telecom and broadcasting, if it were 20 years ago, and we were talking about telecommunications companies, which were just pipes in the old days, it would be less of a problem, maybe, to have this discussion. The problem now is that there's no way you can differentiate a cable company from a telecom company, because they're offering people the same services. That comes down to Canadian content and whether it's available.
When Telus offers you, in western Canada, their IPTV possibility, through phone lines, to access television programming, it's a telecom company offering you that content in your home. Because they do that, under the Broadcasting Act they have obligations about what kind of Canadian content should be offered among all the other programming choices you have when you get the service. That's a way in which the Broadcasting Act has an impact on a telecom enterprise. That's why there's a definite problem with the legislation, because now the companies have become two industries that do the same things, but they're regulated differently.