Absolutely, and it still goes back to the concept of the ethics of the thing. When people say it's too hard to keep track of all of these things—thousands of things get written in magazine articles; things get published; and if it's a hot topic, an instructor might need that on short notice at the university and they would say, “Gee, I can't go through all the rigmarole of paperwork to try to track down who I should be paying for this”—that's bogus. You can track anything with computers now. You can use bar codes to figure out how many times something gets used, whether it's an article, a poem, or a chapter. Every time it gets used, it should be paid for. Why should it be otherwise? None of the rest of the people in this room expect to work for free.
On May 11th, 2018. See this statement in context.