I don't agree. I believe you have to put the question to the collectives that have agreements in the education sector. I believe that's destabilizing them to an enormous degree. A collective, you must recall, is not a company; it's a place where there are rights holders, authors, and publishers in those cases. So this provides an essential economic contribution to those collectives. They're not private companies. Authors support them.
If we consider the revenues that are distributed by the collectives under agreements with the universities, in particular, you see that this absolutely is not insignificant and that it's part of revenue. It's been said, and I repeat it: an author's income is sporadic. It's the sum of a number of small income streams. An author is not a salaried employee who receives a pay cheque every two weeks.
We can't touch that. If we start touching important income like that, we destabilize the authors and make their situations more precarious. I think the purpose of the Copyright Act is precisely to enable them to live from their work.