Lethbridge Herald

CRTC struggles with content issue

CRTC’S DILEMMA: BALANCE CONSUMER AND TELECOM’S FEELINGS ON BROADCAST’S FUTURE IN AGE OF INTERNET

- David Paddon THE CANADIAN PRESS — TORONTO

A warning from Canada’s biggest media companies that their survival is under threat from unregulate­d foreign rivals and illicit content pirates has sparked a massive influx of submission­s to the federal telecommun­ications regulator from consumers with little sympathy for their cause.

Midway through a 30-day public consultati­on that is open until March 1, more than 5,440 responses have been posted with the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommun­ications Commission — predominan­tly focused on one issue.

There’s been a huge outpouring of criticism against an anti-piracy proposal launched last month by a coalition led by BCE Inc., the owner of the CTV television network and specialty channels such as TSN.

“Those numbers are pretty remarkable,” said University of Ottawa law professor Michael Geist, an outspoken critic of the industry’s calls for increased protection­s.

FairPlay Canada, which also includes Rogers Communicat­ions Inc., Cineplex Inc., the Canadian Broadcasti­ng Corp. and others, are calling for a new federal agency to locate and shut down websites that are portals for pirated content.

But the organizati­on shouldn’t be surprised that the public is actively interested in how the internet is run, Geist said.

“I think they realize that we’re all dependent on the internet for so many aspects of our lives.”

In fact, many of Canada’s major media companies have said that the life-blood of their industry — money — is flowing through the internet to unregulate­d foreign rivals and to illegal websites that haven’t paid for content rights.

For BCE, which owns the Bell Canada telecommun­ications business in addition to its media holdings, the problem is multi-pronged.

Not only must BCE help pay for Canadian content, it wrote, but its deep-pocketed foreign rivals like Netflix are bidding up the price of Canadian rights to foreign programs — primarily popular American television shows.

“We rely on this content to bring in audiences and advertisin­g dollars, which then supports the production of Canadian content,” Bell said.

And while the Trudeau government seems determined to support Canadian content as a cultural imperative, there’s little consensus on how to accomplish that goal.

Heritage Minister Melanie Joly has given the CRTC until June 1 to submit a report to cabinet that outlines the possible future of the broadcast distributi­on system, including how it can support Canadian content.

But many of the public submission­s about the future form of the industry, like those about content piracy, are unsympathe­tic to the domestic industry’s concerns about being required to fund Canadian content as they have in the past.

“Yes, some of these program choices would perish without such imposition,” replied Peter Adler of Edmonton. “This begs the question: so what?”

The industry’s answer: there’s a lot of money and potentiall­y thousands of jobs at stake.

In one of its submission­s, BCE points to statistics that show Canada’s private convention­al television industry had $121 million in pre-tax losses in 2016, according to the most recent figures compiled for the CRTC.

BCE also pointed to statistics that show Canada’s convention­al TV broadcaste­rs employed about 5,300 staff people in 2016 — about 16 per cent fewer than in 2012.

Other big regulated Canadian media companies — which include Rogers Communicat­ions Ltd., Corus Entertainm­ent Inc. and the Canadian Broadcasti­ng Corp. — also complained about the erosion of their businesses from foreign interloper­s.

When it comes to solutions, however, unity is harder to come by.

Bell has asked for a simplified regulatory environmen­t so it can compete both domestical­ly and globally.

Rogers said that “over-the-top” services such as Netflix and app-based television can’t continue to get a “free ride” and calls for a regulatory framework that applies rules equally to similar distributi­on platforms.

Corus would like to see an eventual deregulati­on of Canada’s broadcasti­ng industry but, in the meantime, calls for incentives, rather than legislativ­e obligation­s, for privatesec­tor broadcaste­rs.

For its part, the CBC proposed increasing its funding from government so it can be ad-free — thus making more of Canada’s television advertisin­g pie available to its private-sector cousins.

Content piracy was one of the few areas where the domestic companies have spoken with one voice, through the FairPlay coalition.

But Geist — an advocate of net neutrality that doesn’t give preference to one content provider over another — said anti-piracy coalition hasn’t made a convincing case for giving the CRTC a mandate to block websites.

For one thing, Geist said, Canada’s copyright law provides some of the strongest anti-piracy rules in the world.

For another, he added, the CRTC and the proposed Independen­t Piracy Review Agency shouldn’t be empowered to order internet service providers to block websites that are alleged to be content pirates.

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