Thank you, Madam Chair and members of the committee. My name is Pam Dinsmore. I am vice-president for regulatory cable at Rogers Communications Inc. I am here with my colleague Kristina Milbourn, director of copyright and broadband at Rogers. We appreciate the opportunity to share our views with you today.
Rogers is a diversified Canadian communications and media company offering wireless high-speed Internet, cable television, and radio and television broadcasting. We support a copyright act that takes a balanced approach to the interests of rights holders, users, and intermediaries, thereby optimizing the growth of digital services and investments in innovation and content. As a member of both the Canadian Association of Broadcasters—the CAB—and the Business Coalition for Balanced Copyright, we also support their comments in this review.
While both the INDU committee and the heritage committee are dealing with Copyright Act reform, we understand that this committee's focus is on increasing remuneration to artists, creators, and rights holders for the use of their creative works.
Fair compensation for creators is key to ensuring the continued health of the Canadian media landscape, and we believe we are doing our part to ensure that creators are paid for their work. For example, in our capacity as a broadcaster, a BDU, and an ISP, Rogers contributes to the compensation of artists in the following ways.
We spend $900 million annually on the production of Canadian programming; and each year we remit copyright royalties for the music in specialty and TV everywhere streaming services, as well as approximately $25 million annually in copyright payments to compensate creators whose programming is retransmitted in the distant signals we distribute.
The importance of these contributions and royalty payments cannot be overstated. There is, however, leakage in the system. As we stated before the INDU committee, we have watched the rise of the streaming of stolen content on preloaded set-top boxes with deepening concern.
In our view, the proliferation of unlawful IPTV streaming services and preloaded set-top boxes is inextricably linked with decreased remuneration for creators. For instance, it has been estimated that streaming piracy is resulting in approximately $500 million of lost subscriber revenue to the Canadian television industry. This means that for creators, on this $500 million of lost BDU revenue, zero copyright royalties are being paid to rights holders for programming in distant signals, zero contributions are being made to the Canada Media Fund, and zero programming contributions are being made for Canadian productions.
That Canadians are increasingly and often unwittingly consuming stolen content online is borne out by recent studies. For example, Sanvine, a Canadian company that conducts network analytics, reported that in 2017 roughly 15% of Canadian households were streaming stolen content using preloaded set-top boxes. These boxes access an IP address that provides the stream. While illegal downloading remains a major problem for rights holders, illegal streaming has become the primary vehicle by which thieves make the stolen content available.
We have taken action to address this growing problem using the existing remedies under the Copyright Act, but these remedies are insufficient. We therefore propose the following changes to the act.
First, the act should make it a criminal violation for a commercial operation to profit from the theft and making available of rights holders' exclusive and copyrighted content on streaming services. In our experience, the existing civil prohibitions are not strong enough to deter this type of content theft.
Second, the act should allow rights holders to apply to a court for injunctive relief against any intermediary that forms part of the online infrastructure that is distributing stolen content, including ISPs, domain name registrars, search engines, web hosting services, and content delivery networks.
For example, a rights holder should be able to quickly obtain an order from a court to require an ISP to disable access to stolen content available on preloaded set-top boxes without concern that the operation of section 36 of the Telecommunications Act might impede this effort. Currently, the existing judicial process available to rights holders is too time-consuming, too expensive, and too multi-faceted to be effective, in a world in which stolen content can be shared around the world with the click of a mouse before a court has an opportunity to provide relief against copyright infringement.
The Fair Play coalition of which Rogers is a part explicitly requested that the CRTC create an agency for the expedient adjudication of online piracy disputes. In denying the Fair Play application, the commission specifically pointed to the Copyright Act review as the right venue for considering this issue.
In our view, it is now incumbent on this committee to seriously consider that request of rights holders in order to preserve the healthy operation of the Canadian broadcasting system.
In addition to these proposed amendments addressing illegal streaming, we have two further suggestions that, if implemented, would benefit creators.
First, amend subsection 19(3) of the Copyright Act to create a more advantageous royalty split between artists and record labels. More specifically, change the 50-50 split to a 75-25 split, for example, in favour of artists. This was a suggestion made to the INDU committee last month by noted copyright lawyer Jay Kerr-Wilson, who underscored that such an amendment, if implemented, would result in the immediate enrichment of creators without threatening the radio industry.
Second, augment the resources of the Copyright Board to increase the expediency with which it releases its decisions. Last year, within the context of the Copyright Board consultation, the BCBC introduced a number of suggestions to improve the operation of the board. We would direct this committee to that document in order to ensure that Canada's rate-setting body continues to keep pace with the rapid progression of technology so that creators can receive remunerative payments within a reasonable amount of time.
These are our brief comments. We would be pleased to answer any questions you may have. Thank you very much.