I think it's a very progressive move. I assume that you're talking about the reduction of statutory damages to consumers in non-commercial instances to a cap of $5,000. I think it's good.
It does two things. First, it maintains the disincentive or the coercive threat of infringement. Five thousand dollars is a lot of money for the average Canadian family. To be hit with the threat of an infringement suit seeking $5,000 in statutory damages is a sufficient deterrent for the average Canadian, and even for the above-average Canadian. That's a lot of money.
What it also does is remove the incentive for some stakeholders to use statutory damages as a tool to go out and get coercive settlements. You go and approach somebody, saying you have 30 images on your website, and statutory damages are $20,000 per instance. Eliminating that kind of coercive effect I think is good. It removes the incentive of trollish behaviour while maintaining the deterrent effect of statutory damages on individuals.
Something that I think has been lost in the debate on statutory damages and the appropriateness of the value is the option available to copyright owners to prove damages. That's what we do in just about every other area of law. If someone has committed a wrong, you prove damages. We give a special remedy to copyright holders that they have the option of not having to prove damages and electing statutory damages. If statutory damages don't reflect real damages, they can opt to prove damages and get above $5,000.