CRTC Forces Streamers to Pay, Protects Canadian Creativity
CRTC Vice-Chair for Broadcasting Nathalie Théberge outlines how the regulator is modernizing Canada’s broadcasting framework under the Online Streaming Act, including integrating foreign online streaming services into the Canadian system and requiring base financial contributions estimated at $200 million annually for local news, French-language, and Indigenous content. She details recent decisions on accessibility requirements for online and on-demand services, an updated definition of Canadian audiovisual content that retains human creative control, and signals upcoming rulings on Canadian programming spend, distribution rules, and discoverability obligations for both traditional and online broadcasters.
Key Takeaways
- Online Streaming Act integration: foreign streamers now subject to Canadian rules and a base contribution estimated at $200M/year targeted to local news, French-language and Indigenous content.
- Accessibility mandate: new scripted originals and partially scripted national events must include closed captioning and described video/audio on streaming and on‑demand services.
- CanCon definition updated: expanded points system and incentives for foreign–Canadian partnerships, while explicitly requiring human creative control — a global-first regulatory stance on AI.
- Next steps: imminent CRTC decisions on Canadian programming spend, distribution rules, discoverability obligations and tailored contribution conditions for traditional and online broadcasters.
Why It Matters
This is a watershed moment for global streamers and Canadian creators alike. The $200M baseline shifts funding flows and creates a predictable revenue pool for vulnerable local and linguistic markets, while discoverability and spend rules will reshape content strategies and licensing economics. The explicit human‑in‑the‑loop requirement on creative control is a regulatory precedent that could influence international AI policy and force platform product teams to rework generative workflows. Expect commercial negotiations, UX changes around discoverability, and new partnership playbooks between foreign streamers and Canadian producers — and watch investors and engineers for the first sign of pass‑through costs or rewritten deals.
Read full article at canada.ca