It has a couple of dimensions. The most important--and again this has been the subject of discussion back and forth for some months now--was written clarifications to the policy governing the application of the WIPI standard that was issued by the Ministry of Information and Communication in May of 2007.
This written policy sought to clarify that business-oriented devices, similar in characteristic to BlackBerry, that were not going to be made available for sale to the general public would be exempt from the WIPI standard. Our view was that this clarification was required because our intent in Korea at this time is not to make the BlackBerry broadly available to the consumer market, but rather to serve the business and institutional market, which has been the founding core of our business. So BlackBerry would not be something someone would pick up at a store on the street; rather, BlackBerry would be an offering of a service carrier and our partner to a business or an organization that would then buy BlackBerry on behalf of its employees.
So we felt, and still feel, that against that stated policy in May, we qualify for an exemption under the WIPI regulation. Notwithstanding that, when our partner submitted a proposal for a rate plan to the regulator, they were rebuffed and told, no, BlackBerry is for everybody; therefore, BlackBerry must have WIPI.
Again, this was very distressing, and furthermore, throughout this period, a number of other products that had characteristics not unlike ours were exempted from the WIPI requirement. So we were rather taken aback at this position by the ministry.