I think we agree with you that consumers should have control, and that's what you're talking about. I own the device and I pay for the connectivity. That's the way the act is set up now. If it turns to opt out, consumers lose control. What you're going to get, if you lose control, is unsolicited commercial email. There's not only bad spam and malware, if you want to talk about illegal. There is also unwanted, unsolicited, commercial email, and the act covers that as well. That's an element of control that chafes against the thought that businesses should be able to contact people out of the blue. We support the control of consumers in that.
As for the private rate of action, it would have been a complementary aspect because, as I said in our remarks, a recalcitrant or aggressive spammer, somebody who's been told to stop over and over again, clearly fined in the past and continues to do so, or who is a hard-core spammer, needs to have the threat of millions of dollars outside of the administrative regime because some of those just can't be handled by the administrative regime. We've seen people set up shop in Canada who are very hard core.
I'll just end there.