We have the sense that there's not just one response to that. It's not one, or 10, or 20, or 30; it's a case-by-case scenario. We cannot put in the law that you are allowed 10 copies and after that you stop. Sometimes a photograph copied one time would be a problem. Sometimes a person could make a reproduction of 50, and it wouldn't be a problem. Each case has to be defined by itself.
That's why the wording might not seem very clear, but it is for us. First of all, that wording comes from Bill C-11, from another part of Bill C-11, where they tried to define “non-commercial” for purposes other than photography. Somebody has thought about that and defined the term “non-commercial”. We found out that it applies very much to us. In the example we gave earlier, if somebody asked me to do a photograph of a landscape and he gave it to everybody in the village, it's not commercial for him—he doesn't make any money—but for me it removes all possibility of sending it out.
Napster was exactly like that. Napster was a place that was non-commercial. There was no money there. You would put your stuff on the web and somebody else would pick it up. It was an exchange, but there was no exchange of money. Nobody was making money out of it, but they were removing the possibility for any singer to make money. The same example applies to us. The bill was made for people to access their photograph, put it on the web, put it on the social network, and email it. We have no problem with that, but at some point such a practice could damage my business. Let's give an example. You ask me to do a photo for you, and I do your portrait. You give it to your mother, and she puts it in the dining room, or whatever.