fcc commissioner rosenworcel just betweened a couple days ago and said that 2014 could be the year that more americans access the internet via mobile devices than the traditional land lines. mobile devices are excluded from the net neutrality rules. they don't apply to wireless service. and the wireless carriers got that provision through under the guise of the need for reasonable network management. maybe a few years ago that made sense. speeds on wireless internet when the rules were put into place, 2009, 2010, were very low. you couldn't really do anything. today people are streaming netflix, and we are going to continue to see this year wireless carriers come up with new plans to -- that would be possibly illegal under the net neutrality rules as a i plied to wire line. for instance, at&t just this week announced sponsored data in which a company like netflix could pay to have their data not count against a user's cap. so that's, that's, i think, the idea of the dynamic two-sided market that tom wheeler was talking about. we're already seeing that in respect to wireless, and i think