Thank you, and thank you for your presentations. I have so many questions and so little time here. I'm going to try to move quickly.
First of all, Ms. Clarke, just back on the distance learning issue, I have a copy of the legislation here and I'm going to read a quote from it and see if you can tell me what's unfair about it or what changes you'd like to see. It says:
Subject to subsection (6), it is not an infringement of copyright for an educational institution or a person acting under its authority
(a) to communicate a lesson to the public by telecommunication for educational or training purposes, if that public consists only of students who are enrolled in a course of which the lesson forms a part or of other persons acting under the authority of the educational institution;
It's clarified under “Reproducing lessons”. I want to focus on the reproduction of lessons. The bill says, “It is not an infringement of copyright for a student who has received a lesson by means of communication by telecommunication”, which I referred to earlier, “under paragraph (3)(a) to reproduce the lesson in order to be able to listen to or view it at a more convenient time.” So you can tape a lesson and look at it later.
The bill then states:
However, the student shall destroy the reproduction within 30 days after the day on which the students who are enrolled in the course to which the lesson relates have received their final course evaluations.
So if I'm a student taking a distance learning course, I tape a lesson off the Internet or off television, however it is broadcast, and I say that I can go back and actually look at it the night before an exam. But 30 days after I get my final grade, I'm asked to erase that. That sounds inherently fair to me as both an educator with 18 years of experience as a professor and a teacher and also as someone who has taken a lot of courses online. Isn't it fair that you would erase something like that that would be copyrighted after 30 days of getting your final course evaluation?