I'm good.
You should work with publishers to ensure that their works are available for digital licensing in either bundles or through transactional licences. Indeed, sometimes digital licences are the only source of revenue, since I mentioned that payback doesn't compensate for older works. Often there are no sales of some of those older books, so those digital opportunities provide an opportunity.
Third, government should continue to work to pursue alternative publishing approaches that improve both access and compensation. For example, last week's economic update announcement of funding for Creative Commons-licensed local news should be emulated with funding for open educational resources that pay creators up front and give education flexibility in usage.
Finally, non-copyright policies should be examined. For example, how is it that Canadian content rules for film and television production still treat Canadian book authors as irrelevant for CanCon qualification?
I look forward to your questions.