No, it's almost certainly about royalties, because the major actions in pretty much all copyright/piracy models and measures are aimed at things that aren't, in fact, actually information: music, video games, movies, etc. The things that actually contain information -- textbooks, for example -- are usually left on the sidelines in these discussions, and generally have already set up perfectly good guidelines on fair use (see the ones in libraries, for example).
No, it's almost certainly about royalties, because the major actions in pretty much all copyright/piracy models and measures are aimed at things that aren't, in fact, actually information: music, video games, movies, etc. The things that actually contain information -- textbooks, for example -- are usually left on the sidelines in these discussions, and generally have already set up perfectly good guidelines on fair use (see the ones in libraries, for example).
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