What they may have forgotten to mention is how common these letters are. This isn't even the first letter from the industry to Trump, after members of the RIAA's National Advocacy Committee wrote him at the end of November insisting that he take a look at the state of copyright. That's not special treatment either, as the RIAA wrote Obama frequently, to congratulate him on appointing some of its lawyers to positions in the Justice Department in 2009, and in 2010 in favor of the (later rejected by the EU) Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement.

This time, as Billboard explains, instead of just piracy, it's also focusing things like the consent decrees that govern industry licensing through ASCAP and BMI, and the "value gap" between what different services like Spotify and YouTube pay for music.

While there are many with concerns they'd like to have addressed by the Trump administration, it seems like this letter was really for publicly addressing those tech execs. If the RIAA wanted Trump to read its letter, they could've just had Kanye hand it to him when they had their meeting today.