Yes, that is something that at TELUS we have a view on. I'm going to speak to three major problems with extending the private copying levy to devices, and I'll characterize them as double charging, the smartphone problem, and the fact that it sounds like giving up on fighting piracy.
First of all, with respect to double charging, as has been mentioned before this committee before, when a consumer downloads a track from an online music service such as the TELUS music shop or iTunes, the tariff approved by the Copyright Board that governs the consumer's use of that track permits the consumer to make further copies on a device. So the consumer has already paid; the rights holders have already been compensated for that kind of use. If you create an additional fee meant to get at the same use, it sounds inequitable to me.
The second concern I have, and you alluded to this, is with respect to smartphones. It's very difficult to define what would be a digital audio recorder, a digital audio device. What concerns us at TELUS is that a lot of the devices that we sell are multi-function devices and could be caught by that definition. If a per-gigabyte fee is added onto those devices, then suddenly the retail price of the devices we sell, which are not primarily for music or media, although they're used for all sorts of things, suddenly goes up. That has negative consequences in a number of ways.
Third, what concerns me about that kind of approach is that it sounds like throwing in the towel. Implicit in my remarks today is that what TELUS likes about this bill is that it goes after the bad guys. It seeks to stop the source of illegitimate content at its source and those who actively enable it, while at the same time enabling functioning markets for legitimate licensed content. We are in the licensed content business. We want that business to flourish.
That's the two-pronged approach that TELUS sees as particularly powerful in this bill. To adopt an approach that gives up and adopts an arbitrary charge that increases the prices of consumer products is not one that we would recommend.