I can't even remember what I was thinking, since there's been so much discussed throughout.
I really do hear what Mr. Payette is expressing and saying. I think that even as we're talking, we need to be very careful that we are differentiating between new broadcasters and platforms. Netflix, Amazon and Apple are broadcasters. The difference is having a gatekeeper that is actually blocking....
You pitch. They green-light and they move forward. It's the broadcast system; it's just the current modern-day players.
Platforms are considerably different in that they are free, in most cases. You can take YouTube as an example. These are platforms through which content creators like us and other small companies are able to actually upload and self-distribute. It is absolutely a hustle to do that job. It's a tough go. It's 100% of the risk for 100% of the reward, but the sacrifice that you're making is the opportunity to fully own your IP and to be able to control that distribution.
I know it's not a perfect system. There are issues across the board between legacy broadcasters, new broadcasters and those platforms, but the algorithm manipulation is really something that we need to be incredibly careful of. To determine that certain content is more valid than other content and to give preference to one versus another is the crux of clause 4.2 and where it becomes so problematic.