Absolutely, and I think that's why, if you look at the four suggestions we've made, you'll see that this is not really so much adapting to what the EU is doing at this moment. It's more catch-up, and that's the problem: we haven't caught up. We've let these old subsidies kick around. We haven't extended the term of copyright. We've allowed the private copying levy to become a shadow of itself, all because we haven't played catch-up. The first step is to do that.
What the EU is doing is taking a much broader, more comprehensive look at the entire digital ecosystem, and it's focusing in fact on the safe harbours, among others. In the United States, the Music Modernization Act—and I think that's what you were referring to—also falls into that category of a law that is catching people up and addressing imbalances, but what everybody shares in common is, thankfully, after all this time people and governments are recognizing that somewhere along the way they got it wrong. We got it wrong. These were good-faith errors, and we now need to help creators. We need to level this playing field. We need to start putting creators at the heart of our policy-making.