I believe it's a PricewaterhouseCoopers number, and that's an internationally recognized auditing agency. Presumably, if that's the number that they're coming up with, there's some sort of evidence behind that. The evidence that you brought today, that there are savings of tens of millions of dollars, is also backed up by PricewaterhouseCoopers information, which indicates that since 2012 authors and publishers have lost $30 million because of fair dealing. This seems to corroborate the evidence that you provided that this does cost tens of millions of dollars for universities to provide collective licensing.
You have talked about the precedence in cases, but in regard to the recent York decision, which happened after the Supreme Court's ruling on fair use, do you still feel that you're on the right side of the law after that?