In that regard, while there have been numbers of situations that may not have led to prosecutions, or that didn't lead to convictions but did lead to some pretty unpleasant harassment of legitimate speech as a result of the anti-hate section of the Criminal Code as well, there are other provisions even there that are less drastic than the normal prosecutorial instrument is. Richard Moon himself recommended that there can be certain action taken against certain websites that may have material on them that runs afoul of the law. Prosecution wouldn't be a necessary remedy there, but it would be helpful in removing some of the material from the marketplace, assuming that the material contravenes what I say ought to be the barrier.