Our market share has increased. Their market share, we believe, has decreased. We used to be able to get a lot more information when they were public, of course. Now they're in the same position that we are; we're not public.
Our market share has increased against Blackboard's. We're facing other competition now in the marketplace. We're also getting into areas we had not been in historically, so we're running up against other competitors. Right now we're really focusing on corporate, associations, and those sorts of industries, those sorts of verticals. We're finding different players in the market.
Blackboard suffered greatly from the litigation. We ended up with the white hats in the marketplace because of the litigation. We were very public with it. We had a patent log where we posted every filing in the court system, which Blackboard didn't like very much. We posted it whether it was good or bad. It was simply up there. It was a unique approach that I don't think we would have taken if we were in a business to business scenario, but our clients were educators. They were public servants. They wanted to know what was going on. I think we won the PR war, as well as ultimately winning the litigation after a very long slog.