This campaign is now closed.To learn more about the OpenMedia community's involvement throughout the NAFTA renegotiation process go here. To speak out against Bell's website blocking proposal visit LetsTalkCopyright.ca. If you want to stay on top of NAFTA and other free expression developments, please sign up below. Thank you for your support!

UPDATE October 2, 2018: The CRTC rejected Bell's website blocking proposal on the grounds that it doesn't have the jurisdiction to govern this area of the Internet. But it doesn't end here — the CRTC has encouraged this proposal to be examined through the reviews of the Copyright Act, and the Broadcast and Telecommunications Act. So we can't let our guard down! Make sure to say no to website blocking and have your say in Canada's Copyright Act review here

UPDATE, January 29, 2018: Bell, with a coalition including Rogers, the CBC and others, calling themselves "FairPlay Canada", officially filed their dangerous and overreaching proposal to the CRTC urging the federal body create a website blocking system to tackle piracy. This proposal is a slippery slope towards corporate censorship and dismantling Net Neutrality — and it must be stopped. We are coming out hard against this, but we need your help.

Bell Canada has come up with unprecedented proposals to introduce a mandatory website blocking system with no judicial oversight and radical new copyright rules in NAFTA.1,2

These proposals will put Canada on a slippery slope towards online censorship and resemble the activities seen in authoritarian regimes, not healthy democracies. But if enough of us speak up, we can get the federal government to reject Bell’s outrageous proposals and stop them dead in their tracks.

Tell Minister Chrystia Freeland to reject Bell's underhanded attempt to exploit NAFTA to impose Internet censorship. Canada's copyright rules should be shaped democratically by Canadians.