Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I shall talk from my own life experience and that of my father. He was an architect and I am one also. Fifty or sixty years ago, in the beginning of contemporary architecture, architects started copying the work of other architects who got mad and started legal proceedings but to no avail.
Then there were the technicians. They were not trained as architects, but they started preparing architectural plans at a much cheaper cost by copying architects. The GST and other costs were lower. We could not stop that either. The only thing we managed to do was to better inform the public on our services and their costs. To build a house, the services of an architect cost around $15,000 when those of a technician cost $2,000 or $3,000. Those services were not the same and people had to be informed about it. Things went far enough that finally, the province and the Order of Architects agreed to solve the matter clearly so that there are now architect services and technician services. It is legal. We went from an immoral system, as it was not acceptable to copy, to a moral system. We now accept that situation.
I think that this trend is the same in many other areas. What have been the consequences for architects? They had to work harder to be able to give a more interesting product, to renew themselves constantly, to be more at the avant-garde, to be faster than others. It has been very positive.
Following that I taught at university for several years. What happened at that time? Students started submitting plagiarized work. In view of that situation, teachers had to be better informed, read more, to avoid being fooled by students. It has been very positive. It was immoral but positive.
The same thing happened in the area of copyright. Books are copied, but they get subsidies from the government. More books are subsidized. The provincial governments, but particularly the federal government, gave significant support to the publishing industry for the creation of new books. Even if they are copied later, their owners have the time to make money. There is a line of thinking which allows us to see the positive consequences of that.
We talk about China, but let us not forget that in the past, there was a time when Japan was producing very poor quality products. It is not true anymore. It is a matter of time. We talk about tractors and I think that if you paid $100,000 less for a tractor than someone else, unless you are completely stupid, you should know that the quality will not be the same. We morality according to 19th century norms. You agree with me, do you not? We are not considering the fact that certain changes might be positive. Mr. Geist, I entirely agree with you that health and security should be the prime considerations.
There is also fraud that is committed mostly by electronic means. People are told that they won the jackpot, for instance, or that they got a wonderful job and they are asked money to get it. That kind of trend is mostly coming from the United States. The police is trying to solve that problem, but does it have the necessary tools? I am not really advocating public order at all costs. On the contrary, I believe that all this brings changes. However, in some cases, the result is not necessarily positive. Batteries are copied, but some day they will be all at the same price and it won't go further. If it is a type of battery that is dangerous, it is another matter, but otherwise, all this has positive results. Some individuals are extorting money from people that are naive and unsuspecting. What can we do about this?