Bill C-11 Appears Stalled at the Senate With User Generated Content At the Heart of Controversy
Bill C-11 was expected to pass at the Senate sometime last week. Mercifully, it still hasn’t passed.
Bill C-11 was expected to pass at the Senate sometime last week. Mercifully, it still hasn’t passed.
The Senate has resumed and is apparently debating whether to let Bill C-11 receive royal assent. This without the critical fix.
Another defence of Bill C-11 has gone down in flames. The government knew that streamers already paid their fair share.
Bill C-11 Debate: Canadian Government Knew Streamers Already Paid Their Fair Share Read More »
Bill C-11 continues to edge closer to the finish line, but Canadian content creators haven’t given up on the fight yet.
Canadian Creators Continue to Raise Concerns About Bill C-11 Read More »
An off again on again conspiracy theory is that digital content creators are just paid actors for Google to stop Bill C-11. It never added
The Canadian government has rejected the 4.2 amendment of Bill C-11, proving once again that regulating user generated content is the point.
Bill C-11 didn’t exactly receive royal assent as expected last week, so let’s talk about some of the next steps for this bill.
SOCAN is showing what the real point of Bill C-11. They want the House of Commons to reject the Section 4.2 amendment.
Bill C-11 has passed the third and final reading in the Senate. Pablo Rodriguez has said that he will reject improvements to the bill.
Bill C-11 Passes Senate 43-15, Pablo Rodriguez Vows to Reject Improvements Read More »
The YouTube creator liaison has posted a video saying that Bill C-11 can still regulate user generated content despite the change.
YouTube Creator Liaison Says That Bill C-11 Can Still Regulate User Generated Content Read More »