Certainly.
Historically, “taxable Canadian property” has included items such as real property located in Canada, timber limits, and resource properties in Canada. It has also included things like shares of private companies, so shares of a privately owned corporation would be considered to be taxable Canadian property. That gave rise to a number of administrative issues for non-residents selling taxable Canadian property even where they weren't subject to Canadian taxation, because, for example, they had protection under a bilateral tax treaty. The change that is being made is to narrow the definition of “taxable Canadian property” so it will be applicable only in respect of real property, timber limits, resource property, and shares of corporations that derive their value from that type of property.