Hey there, time traveller!

This article was published 2/12/2010 (3590 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

OTTAWA -- Telecom company Shaw Communications (TSX:SJR.B) is calling on the CRTC to regulate certain aspects of the Internet to protect Canadian broadcasting.

The cable carrier, broadcaster and Internet provider told a Commons heritage committee Thursday that online movie providers Netflix, Hulu and video site Google TV are undermining Canadian broadcasters' ability to pay for domestic content.

Shaw executives said the Calgary-based company, which recently bought Canwest Global, pays about $150 million a year for local content and to support Canadian producers through the Canadian Media Fund.

But Netflix, Hulu, Google TV and others can distribute similar programming without any responsibilities to generate Canadian content, or pay into the fund.

"Why should we be burdened with anchors and costs? The reason Netflix can offer an $8.99 service is because they have no costs other than acquiring the content," said Shaw president Peter Bissonnette. He said the current situation undermines the ability of Canadian broadcasters to finance Canadian programs because the foreign competition is sapping their revenue base.

And U.S. broadcasters like Netflix are becoming real threats, he said, drawing viewers away from the regulated system to the unregulated one.

Downloading of Netflix movies is already consuming about five per cent of Shaw's spectrum space, Bissonnette said.

The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission has previously told the committee it has no intention of regulating the Internet.

Even the Shaw officials admit it would be no easy task. For one thing, Google TV and Netflix are not Canadian broadcasters, so are beyond the reach of the CRTC.

-- The Canadian Press