The CRTC vertical integration hearing continues today, following
several full days last week in which the Commissioners repeatedly asked
whether companies such as Rogers, Bell, and Shaw should be required to
offer a "skinny basic" service - a cheaper television package with
limited programming. The introduction of skinny basic appears to be one
of the CRTC's preferred responses to the issue, since it is concerned
that vertically integrated companies will use their broadcast
distribution services to require subscribers to subscribe to their
broadcast properties. The major integrated providers have opposed the
idea, arguing consumers aren't interested.
While greater consumer choice is definitely needed, skinny basic, which
still envisions a required basket of channels, isn't good enough. A
preferable approach would be to offer consumers real choice with a full
pick-and-pay format. I discussed the
option in 2009 during the fee-for-carriage fight:
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Concern over the government's lawful access plans continues to mount,
with coverage in the National
Post and a column from the Globe's
Tabatha Southey.
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A new
report
says Canada is the second-best place in the world to establish massive
computer server farms used for cloud computing. I wrote about Canada's
cloud computing advantage late last year.
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