the action in them, and i'm going to make a decision that i want everybody to know i'm watching arnold shz. schwarzenegger. it's one sentence. i'm going to have to make that decision. why is that not protecting their rights rather than a blanket, forgot about it, hung over from the night before and not thinking clearly. i punched a button on something i really don't want shared. the question is, should we error on the side of privacy or on the side of confidence. and that's the thing we have to decide. >> i actually don't think that's the choice. if a consumer wants to share everything on their facebook page, as they most do, it's not a choice that you or i might make, but a law that takes away that choice really ignores that there are people who want to do that. as long as they are informed of the consequences of doing that and i agreed with the professor that the opportunity ought to be just as easy to opt in, then i really don't see how it's the business of congress to dictate and i'll leave this to mr. hyman but there are some devices that someone can access netflix through where you c