For us it's really e-books and it could be e-audiobooks. If we have, for example, a customer who wants to use a small portion of an e-book the same way they would use a portion of a printed book for personal research or study, they can't do it.
We have a program called Poetry Saved our Lives in the library, in which the participants take found poetry and turn it into performances. They often use small portions of books, but obviously one actually came and asked about an e-book and we can't do anything about it.
One of the things I should say about it not being an issue for Canadian publishers as much as for trade publications is that there are very few Canadian e-books available to libraries except through the big five multinationals. There are very few Canadian e-audiobooks, and that is one of our main issues. We want to buy this material. In the case of one multinational, they are not selling their e-audiobooks to libraries. They are selling them, instead, through paid subscriptions like Audible or Kobo.
I should note that Prime Minister Trudeau's book is available only as an audiobook through Audible. Public libraries in Canada cannot buy Prime Minister Trudeau's book.