For me, that's the basic conversation with students who come in here or researchers who do come in here and ask for advice on how they are going to use...whether it be the book or the software behind my cellphone. That's where those books grew from; those books grew from those ideas. We were sharing those books in the same way we want to be able to share the information that's digital. Just because it's behind a digital barrier shouldn't mean that our innovation and [Inaudible—Editor] science and research should be stifled. It's following the same trajectory of what copyright has been and should be—not in regulating certain portions of what's been created or not created and not having access to that because of the medium.