Well, I guess the bottom line is that those who create need to be compensated. That's the fundamental. Our industry has splintered so much in terms of the types of revenues we need to draw from. The old cliché is that it used to be a dollars business. Now it's a pennies business, and you have to find those pennies from a multitude of sources.
Broadly speaking, it's great that the government is at the table, because it really is a true public-private partnership of the music industry and government. There's private sector money. There's public sector money. There is broadcaster money. There's a multitude of revenues coming in to provide seed money.
Our entrepreneurs, who are small businesses, just need two things. They need time and money. If they don't have the time, they need the money. With them being small businesses and sole proprietors, that capital from a multitude of sources, not the least of which is the public sector, helps them to make the investments they need in their artists and to invest in the strategies they need to do in terms of marketing, touring, promotion, and whatnot.
That doesn't directly answer your question. We could spend an hour and a half on that particular topic, but it's extremely important that we tease out dollars as much as possible where people are exploiting the content that is created by others.