Thank you, and I appreciate this opportunity to speak with you this afternoon.
The IATSE is one of the oldest and largest trade unions representing workers in Canada's entertainment industry. We were formed in 1893 and presently represent 22,000 workers in Canada and 140,000 in North America. We are the technicians and artists who work on big-budget foreign productions such as Star Trek: Discovery in Toronto and Deadpool in Vancouver, but we also work on Canadian productions like Cardinal in Sudbury, and Maudie, which was shot in Newfoundland.
I am certain many witnesses who will be appearing before you will speak to the importance of the cultural industries establishing and nurturing our national identity and how a modem copyright legislative regime promotes creativity and innovation.
I am here, however, to talk about jobs. Effective copyright legislation is a vitally important tool to protect the economic interests of Canadian consumers, creators, producers, broadcasters, and workers. Canadian film and television production is now an $8 billion industry that creates 171,000 full-time equivalent jobs. Digital theft has a direct impact on our industry.
For our members, there is no job security. We are the workers behind the camera—the grips and hair stylists, the set decorators and camera operators—who depend on a healthy industry for their employment. IATSE members receive no residual payments once a production has wrapped. Their incomes depend solely on what is shooting each day, because once your show wraps, so does your paycheque.
Why is strong copyright protection important to the IA? Because when producers—who are our employers—are hit with financial losses due to piracy, there is less money in the pot for future projects and therefore fewer job opportunities for our members. Piracy is not a victimless crime.
Streaming services have overtaken peer-to-peer platforms like BitTorrent and now account for up to 85% of all piracy. In 2016, there were 1.88 billion visits to piracy sites by Canadians. An estimated 375 million pirated movies and TV shows were downloaded using BitTorrent in Canada in 2016 alone.
The latest method for viewing illegal content is the fully-loaded media player. The most popular of these is the Kodi set-top box. These players come preloaded with applications that provide users with access to licensed content, but there are add-ons available that allow users to access unlicensed content. Almost one in 10 Canadian homes now has a Kodi box. Of these, 70.9% are using a piracy add-on.
Here is a specific example of the impact of piracy. Letterkenny is the second-most pirated TV show in Canada. The show is one of thousands available to watch legally through a subscription to CraveTV at a nominal cost of $7.99 a month. It has been downloaded illegally more than one million times. Estimates are that these downloads have resulted in up to 350,000 fewer subscriptions to CraveTV, which has a monthly value of up to $2.8 million.
In 2012 the Copyright Modernization Act was passed with its mandated review of the legislation every five years. There have been some positive outcomes from its implementation. For example, the Federal Court of Appeal affirmed a trial court interlocutory injunction in March of 2017 against retailers of set-top boxes such as the Kodi box. Another example is the 2015 injunction obtained by the Motion Picture Association of America against the Canadian programmers of Popcorn Time, a website that allowed for the dissemination of free online content.
There are still many areas in which the current legislation falls short. The rapidly evolving digital landscape has highlighted serious weaknesses with the current act. On January 2, 2015, the notice and notice system came into force, which was intended to be an educational tool for end-users. Education is good, but there is no evidence that the notice and notice has contributed to any significant change in consumer behaviour. There are no consequences for the consumer and no substantive incentives for internet service providers to purge their services of illegal material. There are also insufficient incentives for ISPs to respect the notice and notice system, because any failure on their part to forward notices from rights holders has no impact on their exposure to copyright infringement liability.
Governments worldwide are coming to the realization that there must be regulation for online platforms. Considerable attention has been placed recently on privacy concerns with respect to online platforms, both in the United States and Canada, but there has also been discussion and legislative action aimed at regulating responsible behaviour on the Internet and placing obligations on online platforms. The Internet is no longer the Wild West. Governments are coming to realize that regulation and greater oversight are necessary.
There is no single solution that will solve this many-faceted issue, but the IA offers one for your consideration. We are one of the 25 organizations behind FairPlay Canada, which includes unions, broadcasters, production companies, and other stakeholders.
FairPlay Canada has filed an application with the CRTC to help protect content creators. We propose a system similar to one used in countries like the U.K., Australia, and France, which would empower the CRTC to identify and remove the ability of illegal piracy websites to reach Canadians. Under our proposal, the CRTC would create an independent, not-for-profit organization called the independent piracy review agency, or IPRA, which would make recommendations to the CRTC on which sites should be blocked.
Any interested parties could make an application regarding a site, and the application would be served on the website and the ISPs. IPRA would then make a recommendation to the CRTC on whether to add the site to the list of blatant piracy sites. It would only recommend adding a website to the list if the evidence presented established that it was blatantly, overwhelmingly, or structurally engaged in piracy. The CRTC would be responsible for making the final determination. The CRTC decision would also be subject to oversight by the Federal Court of Appeal. Once a site was on the list, the ISPs would be required to block any Canadian user from accessing that site, which could be located anywhere around the world.
I want to make clear that this proposal in no way infringes on net neutrality. Both the IA and FairPlay support open access to all legal content on the Internet. However, net neutrality protects only the flow of legal content and is not impacted by this proposal. Again, we're talking exclusively about blatant piracy sites, not sites where piracy might exist. We mean a site like The Pirate Bay, which exists primarily to share copyrighted materials, and not, for example, YouTube, where the majority of content is original and posted by the creator.
It is time for Canada to look at more innovative solutions to piracy. The creative industries need support to ensure that the livelihoods of tens of thousands of talented Canadians are protected.
Thank you.