The exact number I don't know, and I don't want to mislead you. Treasury Board can get that for you. But I do know what we were counteracting, by the way, a $5.5 million ad campaign by incumbents who didn't like the idea of us having a policy that might have created more competition. It was a $5.5 million ad campaign that was patently dishonest, misrepresented government policy on a number of levels, and we had an obligation I think to push back to make sure Canadians who were being misled by this ad campaign about the substance of our wireless policies....
This is not, by the way, a side thing. This is a section of the Canadian economy where it has a 25% growth in jobs in the wireless sector over the past five years or thereabouts, according to Stats Canada, so it's a growing fact to the Canadian economy. Everything you do, and I do, that we all do, is migrating onto digital phones. Phones cost more than computers now. Everything is migrating onto mobile devices. When you have three large incumbent companies pouring millions of dollars into an ad campaign to deliberately mislead the public about a government policy, it requires push back, so we pushed back.