Certainly the way these things are distributed seems unfair and unjust, and with market consolidation it gets even more unjust. Probably the biggest change we've seen in the last 40 years, to answer your earlier question, is that it has essentially become a system of monopoly.
I would remind the government there are options for dealing with monopolies that don't necessarily exist in the Copyright Act, which is a very broad, general thing. There are specific ways to deal with that.
Historically, our antitrust approaches have focused on price fixing, but it's far more concerning at this point in time to look at how large monopolies are able to exert their bargaining power over the individual creators. As the market consolidates, they have more and more bargaining power because there are fewer and fewer other avenues.
That is one area that the Copyright Act can protect, though, by not over-regulating for new entrants.