There are a lot of similarities between radio and music streaming. The difference is that, in the latter case, users have some control because they can choose certain pieces they want to listen to. Users seek out this interactivity.
To a certain degree, a comparison can be drawn with radio. Levies were imposed on the sale of blank cassettes in the past because those cassettes were used to record what people heard on the radio or vinyl disks. While preparing the brief that we wrote on the bill, I had occasion to read the documents prepared by subcommittees in the 1980s. That was 30 years ago, and what was already being proposed at the time in the case of private audio-visual recording was royalty systems. That was the solution that seemed most appropriate. However, 30 years later, we want to question everything. And yet that was really a win-win system for users and creators.