Yes, certainly; I don't know if I got that across in my presentation, but as I mentioned, we have done surveys within our membership showing that the cost of clearing copyrighted materials is growing exponentially. Obviously, for documentary filmmakers, this is particularly challenging if we are taking on subject matters that the corporations who hold the copyright on the material do not agree with.
Just to use my own example, if I was making a critical point about Walt Disney, they are under no obligation under copyright law to license me that material for any price. So in that sense, having no fair-dealing release valve in our law, or no clear one, can act as de facto censorship. I know this has happened to many filmmakers. They're just unable to take on the types of issues they want to because of copyright laws.