Mainiac--
I am pretty sure that the statement was intended in the context of the behaviors of modern corporations to make use of copyright, and similar protections that were enacted to perform a certain civil function (To ensure that the knowledge being used by those companies can be widely circulated, to better the public knowledge and thus to improve the state of the art through later mass adoption and later incremental innovations--For patents, and to provide incentive to creative works creators (the people doing the creative thought process) to support them while they create their next work-- for copyright) in exchange for a financial function (they get exclusive use rights for a time), getting used instead for purposes that they were never, EVER intended for.
Such as, stifling all competition in the market, locking down markets so that actual free trade never happens, and thus regionalized pricing can continue while real capital gets moved around; Using copyright like it was itself a commodity that can be bought and sold, so that it can be used as such a cudgel, etc.
He was stating that he did not want corporations to have their ability to abuse those features INCREASED, since the only thing that might possibly be beneficial from that (in a far off stretch) is that the corporations make more money, and where the detrimental action that such enabling would cause would be significantly more deleterious overall.
Essentially, I believe he is saying that he does not want to see the power of corporations to abuse the legal system, abuse features of copyright, patent, and mark protection, and other such institutions or features, increase for the sole purpose of increasing their private profits.
That is significantly less vague.
I say this, because the stated reason deter of many corporate lobbyists in their messages to congress and government to expand on those features to make them EASIER to abuse in those ways, is that without that enablement, they will make less profit, and less profit is bad, m'kay.
So the, "but muh PROFITS!" line is apt. There have even been some absurd claims by corporations that lost potential profits be granted as remunerations. Last I checked, a corporation is not ENTITLED to potential profits or market share.