It certainly happened with John Greyson and his film, where he used Mack the Knife. Even though Mack the Knife is in the public domain, they still threatened to sue him if he showed his film anywhere. Yet McDonald's took Mack the Knife and didn't ask permission, and had a television ad. So John is a potential criminal.
Madam Côté, I've written five books, and I've been a magazine publisher, so I feel very strongly about the idea of the quality of work. I agree with you; I have a new book project, and people tell me to put it online. Well, I could, but to me it's not a real book. Maybe I'm old school.
Madam Lavallée showed off some products, so I'd like to show some of my product. If anybody wants, they can buy some for the office.
Now, this is interesting. I have five books. Two of them are on Google Books. I was pretty shocked to find my books on Google. Two of them are on, and two of them we decided not to put on, because the photographer said--I worked with a photographer--clearly, it's very easy to take the photos on the Internet, so it devalues the overall work.
So Google has two options. You could say sue them, but you can opt out. So we opted out for some of the books. We said no, we don't want them...because the photography could be easily taken.
Now these other books are remaindered, and this is the issue. When a book is remaindered, the book value of a remaindered book is zero. If there were a good small publisher, I'm sure your publisher would call the writer and ask them if they wanted to come and take all the books out of the warehouse. Otherwise they would go to the landfill or to bookstores to be sold for $2 or $3 or $5, and the author would get nothing.
So I have two books on Google, and they can be researched. If someone wants them, they can go to Amazon and buy them. I guess I could probably say that...if I was saying I didn't want to support the Google revolution, it might help my pocketbook. My wife's a writer, and every time I come home there are five books sitting on the table. I say, “Where did these books come from?” She says, “Oh, I was researching, and I found this out-of-print book, and I went and found it on Amazon”, and I say, “Laird tunderin jaysus, the last time I came home there were five rare books that you bought.”
So how do we make it possible...? I like the model Quebec decided on. You decided you didn't like the Google model and that you were going to do your own. Is it possible that we can maintain a platform for people to find out-of-print books that otherwise would go to remainder, so that they can research them and find them? Do you think your model is a reasonable model for Quebec authors, or is this something we're going to have to continue to turn to legislators like us for to try to sell?