Thank you very much.
Once again, it is a fascinating discussion.
Mr. Oakey, you were correct on one element on the levy: the United States doesn't use a levy. You're absolutely correct. They sue people. A hundred thousand people last year alone were sued in the United States. They don't actually get to court. They just get a thing in the mail that says, “Give us five thousand bucks, or we'll sue you for a million bucks.” That's not exactly consumer friendly.
You didn't mention that many European countries use a levy, because a levy has been found to be a balancing act. It goes back to the days of the cassettes, when they started to notice that music revenue was starting to drop off because people were making numerous copies.
As a musician, I never had a problem with making copies. Nobody makes more copies than musicians, because we love music. It's not about dinging people and shutting them down. It's finding some balance.
You threw out the $75 fee that my colleagues over there just love to run with. Yet I look at the Copyright Board's decision, and it seems completely at odds with the position you're taking. When it was applied to cassettes, it wasn't market distorting. When it was applied to CDs, it wasn't market distorting. Sure, we heard people complain. I used to hear people say, “I've never made a copy. I'd never make a copy. Why should I pay the levy?” I never met so many digital virgins in my life. The fact is that people are making massive numbers of copies.
When it came before the Copyright Board, sure, the rights holders were going to start up as high as they wanted, but the Copyright Board adjudicates. It makes them go through it. It tests them. You could start with seventy-five bucks, and they could bring it down to five bucks, because one of their decisions is going to be that it has to be based on the intent. For example, James Moore asked if the iPod levy would be applied to cars now. Well, it wouldn't be applied to cars, because you don't buy a car to record a song. If you do, you have lots of extra dough that you probably shouldn't have anyway. It applies to music players. Now, there are many other forms out there right now—people have phones and everything else—but the Copyright Board was very specific: it had to be marketed as a music player. That's it. It was very limited in what it was.
The Copyright Board also made it clear that it is not going to be market distorting.
The other element is if say, for example, iPods drop from $300 to $59, and we have a $10 iPod fee on them, it's within the minister's power to change it to a percentage or to change it to whatever dollar figure he wants so that we ensure that it's not market distorting.
You come here and say that this is going to be $75, and it's going to drive people to the United States. Did you ever see people driving down to the United States to buy cassettes?