 The World Wide Web Consortium will only standardize new protocols and technologies if they can be implemented on a royalty-free basis. Could you elaborate on that? The things which have been built upon the web have been built because there was not renewable energy because there was no fee payable. There are lots of systems which have been less successful, and in fact when you look on the internet, even when you look at streaming video, you find that you have to download different players to play the information from different places. There are competing standards which are not royalty-free, that you find unlikely that you can't get an open source copy of these. There are only a very limited number of the players for these things. It's a continual frustration to users and information providers alike that they have to make a choice as to which players that they'll use, and that's an example of what can happen when there is a proprietary... You could have made a lot of money if you charged for all the work that you did and do, and that the World Wide Consortium... Chairman Markey, let me assure you that if I had charged from the word go, per click, the World Wide Web would not have taken off at all. We would not be here talking about it, and you would not be getting all that information from the web browser on your BlackBerry. I think it's important for the committee to hear that sentence utter. Had there been a fee, there would have been no investment. The investment that people made in the web was made by volunteers in their garages late at night. It was made by people, system managers who, when their workday was done, decided they didn't install something like a web browser. And when it was done by companies allowing me... Well, I myself was allowed by my boss to do it in spare time. People did it in their 10% time. And if there had been any paper click, if there had been any form of fee, they would...