This is almost a nonsensical debate I've heard at this committee, whereby we're really just concerned about getting money to creators. It's as if that needs to be the 100% focus of the committee.
Ultimately, there's an ecosystem in this entire industry. Every industry that relies on copyright protection has an ecosystem, and a big part of that ecosystem is a healthy industry that provides the jobs and the opportunities for the creators, for the actors, and for the workers and labourers who support it, who then support all the other industries and economies and all the spinoff jobs related to a film being made in a community. They are immense and they touch on so many other economies, but at the heart of that ecosystem is most certainly an industry. That industry works on economics, and the economics of that are return on investment. If you can't be assured of a return on investment, you're not going to make the investment in the first place.
Mr. Roy, you said something that I think is 100% true. People think anything they find on the Internet must be free and it must be okay. If they found it for free, it should be free, and I hear that prevailing view even from some members around this place.
If there's one thing I hope this bill achieves--and maybe you can comment on this--it will outline what is right and what is simply wrong.