I touched on, obviously, the specifics. If we were to think about it from a principle basis, I would say that, one, it needs to be forward-looking. We need to recognize that some proposals that have been put on the table, and are very strongly advocated for, come out of the 1990s. We're talking about policies a decade or older that, frankly, have been proven not to work. We need a bill that doesn't become irrelevant the day it is passed, or frankly, irrelevant the day it's introduced.
We need legislation that is forward-looking. We need it to be technology neutral. Bill C-61, as an example, made specific reference to VHS tapes, talking about the ability to transfer in format from a VHS tape to digital. This is ridiculous. This is not forward-looking. This is go to your basement to see if you can find any VHS tapes.
So we need forward-looking, we need technology neutral, and then I think we need to remember the issue of balance. Everybody comes and says that copyright is all about a balance. I think we need to recognize that it is very easy, if we're not careful, to take the balance we have in the offline world and distort it online. Locking everything down without bringing on the balancing stuff that we have in the offline world would distort the balance in this digital world, which I think we all recognize is the dominant place where most people are going to be consuming and creating.