We have a lot of concerns about that, especially since the initial draft of what the privacy tribunal would be like would be that there would be only one privacy expert on that.
The Privacy Commissioner presently has enough expertise to make a proper administrative decision, and then we have courts, if you want to go and say there's a problem above that. That's a much more efficient way, and it's a more predictable way to deal with this rather than creating a quasi court. Quasi courts tend to have quasi judges on them, and you get quasi decisions like we had with Rogers, so we would prefer to avoid that.