It is part of the Truth and Reconciliation process, but one of the issues that we've uncovered so far for the first nations community unto itself is that the Copyright Act usually deals with an individual or an individual creator, and the tariffs are paid to that person or individual and whatnot. For the indigenous communities, traditionally they look at a lot of things as a collective, as the particular first nation owning that symbol or that particular story that has been passed down through generations. It's really very difficult to apply the ownership to an individual. It's to the community itself. That's the way they view things.
That's one of our challenges with this Copyright Act. It really doesn't apply in a way that's meaningful for our indigenous people. We're trying to unravel that particular mystery. I don't know if anybody here at this particular table has any comments about indigenous ways or indigenous artists that they've been dealing with.
Ken.