Last updated: November 10, 2008 - 9:59pm
Canadian cultural policy has long relied on two levers to promote Canadian content. First, regulators require broadcasters and cable companies to allocate a portion of their revenues to help support the creation of new Canadian content. Second, that content is granted preferential treatment through minimum "CanCon" requirements for both television and radio broadcasting. While these approaches may have worked for conventional broadcasting, the big question in the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission's forthcoming hearings on new media is whether they can be applied to the Internet. Canadian cultural groups, the biggest proponents (and beneficiaries) of this policy approach argue that similar mechanisms can be adapted to the Internet by requiring Internet service providers to hand over a portion of their subscriber revenues for the creation of new media content. ISPs unsurprisingly opposed, arguing an Internet tax is unfair since it forces all subscribers to fund content in which they may have little interest. Moreover, they note such a scheme may also be illegal since it applies the Broadcasting Act to telecommunications activities.
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