If I could, I'd like to address the exhibition right.
We're here to talk about copyright. Copyright is about the issue of making copies. The exhibition right is not about making a copy; it is about displaying a painting in a public space, not for sale or for rent, for any work created after 1988.
So we feel, first of all, the concept is an anomaly. It does not belong in copyright legislation. Museums had been, before this was brought into play, voluntarily paying artists fees, and we will continue to do that. We believe in that, when the work comes from an artist.
When the museum, however, purchases a work and it goes into its permanent collection, we believe we should have the right freely to display and not seek the permission or pay a fee to a copyright owner.