There have been many technological revolutionaries in history. University courses are full of studies about Gutenberg, Thomas Edison, and Henry Ford. I'd suggest Karlheinz Brandenburg should be included.
Karlheinz Brandenburg perfected the MP3. He took audio analog files and with very high rates of compression and a very low bit rate he destroyed one of the biggest entertainment industries in history, without meaning to, but that was the effect, because it was so easy.
Let's suppose a friend comes over to my house and says he's got this great CD I should listen to. I put the CD in my computer and I make a copy. It takes all of 20 seconds. I give his CD back to him. Then because I think it is a great song, I e-mail the song to my daughter, saying that she should really check out the song. She listens to the song and thinks it's great, and she might e-mail that song to two or three of her friends.
It could be argued that this is all lost revenue, or it could be argued that some people actually would buy a copy. It's hard to define exactly what's going on with the copying. It seems to me there have been numerous attempts to, as the record industry says, put the genie back in the bottle. They thought they would ignore the technology, and that didn't work. Then they decided they would sue a lot of kids to teach them to respect the rules, and 35,000 lawsuits later, the kids moved on to other things and it didn't restore the market.
Now the Conservatives are working on this belief that if they shut down isoHunt and they put digital locks in place, somehow the market will come back. I think that is an absolutely naive belief. That's not to say anybody supports what's happening with isoHunt, but I don't know anybody who goes to isoHunt. The copying that's being done all across Canada, all across the world, is by people trading music because they love it.
I'm asking what our solution should be. It seems to me in 1997 Canada came up with a solution when cassettes were being recorded, and that was minuscule compared to what's being copied today. The copying will go on regardless of isoHunt, regardless of lawsuits, regardless of shutting down BitTorrent. Does it not seem that we need to have a revenue stream in place that we've already had as a principle to ensure that artists get something out of the copying? Isn't that the principle of the private copying levy?