Yes, that's the impression I'm getting, and it's important to ask why it's like that. It's because advertising revenue is now being generated on platforms from which the public, and in particular young people, are getting more and more of their news content. Many of our fellow citizens are now spending much more time on these platforms, which don't feel any obligation to disseminate news that has been gathered using traditional journalistic methods. So much so that a company like Meta can say that it's going to censor Canadian media, ostensibly on grounds that it's a way of fighting against legislation it doesn't like.
Those companies ought to have been told that they wouldn't have the right to practise any censorship, except when national laws impose restrictions, and that they would have to use some of the resources they have earned from increased user attention to be partly reinvested in the production of Canadian news and content. That's the Canadian model that has been around for many decades, and it's a model that should have been continued and strengthened.