 I think there's plenty of work still to be done domestically here in terms of encouraging the government to really speed up their process in terms of protecting the creative industries here, particularly with the advent of high-speed broadband that's going to put on further pressure not only on the music industry but certainly on the movie industry and the TV business. And I think the more the government can do to help protect and support those industries and really support the legitimate, the many legitimate services we have to deliver our music consumers the better. I think we have to be very, very careful in taking things to granted because we've had to be created by necessity over the years and other countries that were maybe lucky, they're catching up because technology communication means that a lot of creative properties, whether they be in technology, has become digital and can be exported all around the world. So we have to keep that edge. There is a recognition that the creative industries and taking music as my sector is valuable is that we are good at it and actually that all we really want is quite limited help and assistance really and I think that certainly the work we're trying to do to identify that just having some strong copyright laws and then leave us to get on and do what we're good at is pretty much the help that we need and a little bit of assistance at times in trying to make sure we can combat the piracy element would be good not just for the creative sector for music but also those services are actually trying to provide legitimate business models off the back of it because again they're severely limited on how much you can charge for a service if there are free options out there.