Thank you for your question.
First, I want to say that the policy on copyright comes under the jurisdiction of Canadian Heritage and Industry Canada. I am accompanied today by my colleague, Mrs. Colette Downie, Director General of the Marketplace Framework Policy Branch at Industry Canada. We will share our time.
It is true that the difference between copyright and droit d'auteur is a historical one. In addition, legally speaking, the two systems originated in two different parts of the world.
Let's talk about copyright.
It's a part of marketplace framework law. It's one of the key elements of marketplace framework law in Canada, along with other laws. It supports the development and availability of content.
Points in the deck presentation mention global audiences. How does copyright support global audiences? Well, bringing our copyright law up to international standards, as an example, is a way to enable Canadian creators and Canadian rights holders to participate on an even playing field with other countries.
We were talking about exports, and Ms. Cliff was highlighting some of the key success stories of programming. In terms of direct access, from my reading of the testimony that you've heard, part of what is changing is the interactivity and the way creators are reaching their audiences. It can be a much more interactive process. What is changing is that creators have more direct access to their audiences, who participate with them and shape with them what the creative product is.
I was reading some of the testimony. Jumpwire Media, as an example, testified before you. They have an online model through which they are tracking individual sales of their product. That's an example of the changing approaches. That means that the business relationships are changing as well.
Who creators work with and how they distribute their material is changing. Again, I think that is certainly part of the testimony that you've heard.
Copyright gives creators a whole series of rights. They have a series of economic rights. They have moral rights. They're able to license or assign those rights, either partially or regionally or for specific time periods or for specific media. I think the Copyright Act is a good three or four inches thick, and it tells how all of that supposed to work.
Basically, creators have this series of rights that they start with when they make a creation. The choices that they make in bringing that creation to market amount to the management of those rights. As business relationships change and create greater responsibility for them--and that's another point for creators--it's possibly a challenge, but it's also an opportunity for them to be able to manage their rights in different ways.