Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I appreciate the testimony.
I think Canadians are inherently fair. I think that if laws are established, Canadians don't steal. Canadians don't generally break the law—most Canadians abide by the law, especially when they understand it and it's outlined properly and they understand what the rules are in a marketplace.
But I'll also say that Canadians right now are about fed up with being nickel-and-dimed. In fact, they're really fed up with it. We saw a great example last week on the UBB ruling with the CRTC. I'd be surprised if there's a single member of this committee who didn't receive dozens, if not hundreds, or perhaps more e-mails on that decision saying stop nickel-and-diming me. Stop it; I've had it. Canadians are at a level of frustration.
Ms. Downey, you gave a great performance in your presentation.
I'd really like to know...you indicated that the private copying levy, something we've call an iPod tax, won't apply to cars. In fact, you may have listed a few things it won't apply to, despite the fact that my wife's newish vehicle, I believe, has a 30-gigabyte hard drive in it, but it might have a 60-gigabyte hard drive built right into it that's specifically for the storage of music. I'd be very interested in learning from you which devices you do suggest it would apply to.