Please stop cutting off my microphone. Thank you.
They're not saying that at all, Ms. Atwood. In their appearances here, they've indicated that they represent people who are both writers and educators and that they want to be fair to both sides.
I think it's safe to assume that the rules established by the Supreme Court of Canada and the Berne three-step test...I'm pretty confident that our educators, our educational facilities, and our provincial governments will follow the law. They have a good record in that regard.
I want to say what establishing education as an inclusion under fair dealing does. It allows education. It opens the door to the use of new technologies in the classroom without fear of liability. This relates to new, electronic materials that could be used, things that are freely posted on the Internet. It allows some of these things to be presented to a classroom for educational purposes. It's about taking our education to the next level. It's not, and it has never been, according to the witnesses we've had before us, about taking away the revenues that are established for copying. The Supreme Court has established that copying is not fair dealing. The six-step test for the Supreme Court is well established and is consistent with the spirit and nature of this bill, as is the Berne three-step test. I encourage people coming in to say it's going to wipe out educational revenues to first learn what fair dealing is.
Ms. Hebb, you have a comment.