National Post

CRTC asks U.S. tech giants for key data

- EMILY JACKSON

Canada’s broadcast regulator is once more asking America’s tech giants for coveted online streaming data to help it plot the future of Canadian content consumptio­n, a move that could test its clout with U. S. companies that previously refused to hand over their subscriber informatio­n.

The Canadian Radio- television and Telecommun­ications Commission last week asked Netflix, Facebook, Spotify, Apple, Amazon and Google for a trove of data that would reveal how Canadians consume audio and video content on the internet, including their advertisin­g and subscripti­on revenue, free and paid subscriber volumes, Canadian content expenditur­es and total viewing and listening hours for the past two years.

The CRTC says the data will help it prepare a report for the federal government, which ordered it to report back on future models of audio and video distributi­on in Canada, and how these models will support Canadian content. The report is due in June.

“This informatio­n will help the commission better understand the size and scope of the online audio and video market in Canada and its contributi­on to Canada and Canadians,” the CRTC wrote the companies on Friday.

These numbers are closely guarded, making it difficult to account for new players in a system that relies less on traditiona­l radio and television broadcasts. But researcher­s estimate the number of Netflix subscriber­s alone has grown to about 6 million. For comparison, about 11 million Canadians have TV subscripti­ons.

The CRTC promised to keep all data confidenti­al, calling its decision to do so “final and conclusive.”

“The commission understand­s the commercial­ly sensitive nature of the informatio­n requested, therefore as indicated, will maintain confidenti­ality of the record received,” spokeswoma­n Patricia Valladao said in an email.

The CRTC asked for the s ame i nformation f r om Rogers, Bell, Shaw, Corus, Quebecor, Stingray Digital Group, Sirius XM, DHX Television, CBC, Pelmorex and APTN. It’s a common procedural request for the Canadian companies, which routinely provide competitiv­e informatio­n given they unquestion­ably answer to the regulator.

But it’s unclear whether the American internet giants will comply.

Netflix, which got into a high- profile fight with the CRTC over disclosure a few years ago, isn’t commenting on the latest request for informatio­n. In 2014, Netflix refused to comply with CRTC orders for subscriber informatio­n during a hearing on the future of television. Netflix said the order did not apply to it under Canadian broadcasti­ng law. The CRTC disagreed.

The spat culminated with the CRTC erasing Netflix and Google from the public record of the hearing ( Google refused to hand over YouTube upload data). But the question of the CRTC’s jurisdicti­on was never tried in court.

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