On the data caps, which became a big political and popular issue earlier this year, with usage-based billing, I think what we saw here was a couple of years of a policy running under the radar screen for most Canadians. The relationship with the CRTC was such that you had a couple of larger players, led by Bell, that were able to push forward.
I thought the government, all political parties, did a good job in February to grind that to a halt. We had hearings from the CRTC over the summer, and we'll see what the CRTC actually does. But recognize that our caps problems won't get solved solely by regulating them away. I don't think that's what the CRTC will do at all. They might do it at the wholesale level. They're not going to be solved at the retail level. The only way you can fundamentally change them is to change what the marketplace competition looks like. We need more competitors. We may need some of the open-access rules that we heard about from the manufacturers. Those are the kinds of things that help smaller ISPs that sometimes have large subscriber bases in local communities but aren't nearly as large as the big players. Allowing them to compete effectively, allowing new entrants to come in, trying to foster the wireless broadband—these are some of the tactics we can engage in to allow us to stem what has been a gradual decline in the Canadian situation. We're one of the only countries in the world that has virtually uniform data caps. The effect of that is significant hidden costs when you start talking about new kinds of e-commerce services.