To be specific, our hearings earlier this week, or that concluded the Friday before last, were on what I'd call home Internet services. That's wireline services to the home. That market certainly has stagnated, contrary to what I've indicated with respect to cellular prices, which have been significantly decreasing consistently since 2017.
Now the world has changed, in part because we're all working from home. We're consuming far more Internet services at home, with higher speeds and more data. That particular market is the one we looked at last week. What we've been seeing with that environment is that the regime put in place for competition is greatly in need of update. We've been seeing that a number of players were exiting the market. They were having more difficulty being able to serve consumers and they were losing subscribers.
There we certainly took action on that front. Not only have we conducted the proceeding and held the hearing to hear from over 300 different groups to talk about the issue there, but we took immediate action to lower the rates the competitors could use by 10%.
We also took action to mandate access to fibre services by those competitors, so they can continue to expand their services, serve Canadians and bring more competition.