Unfortunately, it's a pretty dull list as well, involving decades upon decades of regulations.
This isn't a Canadian phenomenon; it's a North American—perhaps even global—phenomenon. Cable television, so the distribution of signals over cable, is a sector in decline. The Internet is now king. The Internet is the embodiment of deregulation; you don't need a licence to broadcast over the Internet. Big foreign companies, the Netflixes, Disneys and Amazons of the world, understand that and have invaded the space. To this day, cable companies are the only ones contributing financially to the Canada media fund, which supports local production, funding a large part of it.
As people cut the cord and unsubscribe from cable TV—a major phenomenon—the fund's financial resources will dwindle. That will undermine the entire Canadian production ecosystem and, as a result, the entire news sector. Without a strong, reliable and well-funded news sector, democracy is at risk, in my view.