Yes. Particularly for a start-up like that one, working on games for the mobile devices, tax breaks aren't terribly relevant. They need to survive for the next 10 to 12 months to even file their taxes. In those cases, whether or not it's through the federal government, they need more early-stage opportunities, such as venture-oriented funding or programs like the Canada Media Fund that are providing dollars to actually produce stuff at the start.
A young start-up has no money, and they don't have a foreign head office investing in the region and planting and building up a studio. They are just five guys in a basement with a dream. To the extent that there are support mechanisms, a big part of it is access to capital. That would constitute one thing that would certainly help to generate new start-ups that create new intellectual property. Concerning the IP you mentioned, if the word game that is Canadian-owned makes millions and millions of dollars, that money is going to flow back into the Canada ecosystem and economy. That's one piece.
Then, you can start looking at other areas: linkages with universities, which we touched on; having more entrepreneurial-oriented educational programs, so that when these kids come out of university they can contemplate starting something of their own and generating their own media games; funding research. There's a lot of stuff that could be done.
Certainly, on the funding side, facilitating access to early-stage capital would have a dramatic effect on the volume or velocity of start-ups and the creation of new intellectual property.