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Canada seeks $630 million from streaming firms to fund domestic content

发布时间:2020-11-06 作者: 奈特英语

A man fishes salmons during their migration to the spawning grounds in Humber River in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Oct. 18, 2020. (Photo by Zou Zheng/Xinhua)



Canada introduced a bill that would strengthen the broadcast regulator and allow it to collect up to C$830 million ($630 million) by 2023 from online streaming companies such as Netflix and Amazon to fund Canadian content.

The Liberal government said the changes were needed because tech firms, which provide wildly popular online services, are exempt from rules obliging domestic broadcasters to spend a proportion of programming budgets and allocate a set portion of air time to Canadian artists.

"Our government believes that everyone who benefits from the system should contribute to it fairly," Heritage Minister Stephen Guilbeault told reporters.

The idea of strengthening the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), which regulates the broadcast and telecoms sectors, was recommended by a government-mandated panel probing how to update broadcasting laws to reflect the massive growth of online services.

The bill would make the major US tech companies pay for domestically produced content but did not tell how.

Michael Geist, Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law at the University of Ottawa, noted the CRTC would gain major new powers to regulate online streaming services and also fine firms it deemed to be in non-compliance. "The bill creates considerable marketplace uncertainty that could lead to reduced spending on Canadian film and television production and delayed entry into Canada of new services," he wrote in a blog post.

The panel also recommended obliging the tech firms to collect local taxes. Officials made clear this was an option.

Reuters

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