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Bell is leading the push to end Canadian Net Neutrality with a secret Star Chamber


Len

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Bell is leading the push to end Canadian Net Neutrality with a secret, extrajudicial Star Chamber that will decide what Canadians can and can't see

Canada has a grotesquely concentrated telcoms sector and a grotesquely concentrated media sector, and thanks to a series of extremely anticompetitive mergers, the two sectors are one in the same.

That's why three companies -- Bell Canada, Rogers, and Cineplex -- can get together and hatch a plan to create an opaque, extrajudicial policy whereby any website deemed to be "piracy" will be blocked for all Canadians, under the auspices of a new body called the "Internet Piracy Review Agency" and will incorporate broadcasters and movie studios, who will decide, in secret, what parts of the web to block.

The plan was submitted to the CRTC, the Canadian telcoms regulator, and leaked to Canadaland, an excellent, independent, crowdfunded investigative news business (I am an annual donor to Canadaland).

A spokesperson for Navdeep Bains, the Minister of Innovation, Science, and Economic Development, says in a statement there is already a way to protect intellectual property: the copyright system.

While not saying the government would outright reject a piracy-blocking system, spokesperson Karl Sasseville says, “Our government supports an open internet where Canadians have the ability to access the content of their choice in accordance to Canadian laws. ‎Net neutrality is a critical issue of our times, much like freedom of the press and freedom of expression that came before it. That’s why our government has a strong net neutrality framework in place through the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission.

“While other parts of the world are focused on building walls, we’re focused on opening doors‎.”

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