I suspect most Canadians have seen the
advertisements from the
Local
TV Matters campaign from broadcast networks CTV (and the
'A' Channel), CBC, and Global (and Chek News). This includes some
of the PSA's and songs they (ironically)
make
available through YouTube. You may also have seen the
material from the
Stop
the TV Tax campaign brought to you by re-broadcasters
(cable/satellite/etc companies) Bell (and Bell Aliant), Cogeco,
EastLink, Telus and Rogers.
Bell Canada is part owner of
CTV, and there are other complications. ACTRA (Alliance of Canadian
Cinema, Television and Radio Artists) is obviously in
favor of cable companies paying for local programming (far
beyond news), and has a position different than either the
broadcasters or the re-broadcasters.
While Conservative MPs
previously opposed fee for carriage, they seem to now
be far more supportive. I believe that this has been the
result of effective marketing on the part of the broadcasters in
claiming cable rates won't go up even if re-broadcasters are paying
all broadcasters, including local stations. The CRTC
is asking for consumer input into this debate (Deadline
November 2, 2009).
As a Canadian citizen you may
feel stuck in the middle of a battle between massive television
networks and massive communications (phone and cable) companies . This fee for carriage debate may turn out to be good news to
Canadians in the long run as it may allow us to finally modernize our
communications infrastructure.
In March of 2008 I wrote about
what I felt would be an
ideal future communications infrastructure, how do we get there, and
what is stopping us. The short form is that I believe we
need to do away with current phone and cable companies as they are
currently structured, and replace them with a utility model where the
distribution network within a municipality is handled like
electricity is now. This would be a government owned utility where
policy is set by the government, even if management is outsourced to
the private sector. Services would be fully competitive between
players outside the public sector, with the CBC being one narrow
exception. We have this small blip in our history where
communications services stand out as being treated differently than
all other critical infrastructure, and we need to fix this special
case.
Lets look at the current
skirmish, and how this may help us to eventually obtain an ideal
infrastructure.
When cable companies were
first formed, what they were doing was simply illegal. They were
taking television stations out of the air and retransmitting them
without permission from or payment to the relevant copyright
holders. In Canada not only do the creators of the programming have
copyright, but a broadcaster has a copyright in the communication
signals that it broadcasts (Section
21 of the Canadian
Copyright Act).
To legalize cable a deal was
struck between governments, the cable companies and the broadcasters. This arrangement came out of an era when television was paid for by
advertising. It was thought that since increasing audience size at
no cost to the television station would increase their advertising
revenue, that cable companies would not have to pay television
stations. Cable companies were also mandated to carry these free
local stations in a given local area as part of the basic cable
package such that consumers would not have to pay more.
Advertising is moving from
print and television broadcasts to online. It is ironic that the
television networks are using
a YouTube station as part of their campaign given YouTube's
owner (Google) is where a significant part of this advertisement
revenue is going. Advertising alone will soon not (in some cases
already doesn't) pay enough to keep local programming going.
Integrated with the timing of
this debate is the August
31, 2011 date for the Canadian Digital Television switchover.
Local broadcasters are already having to retool how they transmit
television over the air, and are wanting to renegotiate their
arrangements with re-broadcasters at the same time.
While I don't have pointers to
the text of the relevant legislation (please add to comments if you
do), I believe that, if local broadcasters are to receive payment
from re-broadcasters, this long-standing deal will break down in all
aspects. It won't simply be cable companies paying local
broadcasters (as is the case for other stations), but will likely end
the concept of a basic cable package. Consumers will want to decide
on their own what stations they are paying for as the costs are
passed on to them. À la carte television will eventually become
the norm, where television viewers pick individual stations and/or
networks rather than purchasing any cable company created bundle at
all.
When consumers are choosing
what stations they want, is there any utility to a cable company as
they are currently organized? The next logical step will be to
follow what I detailed for an ideal infrastructure. Viewers would
be able to directly subscribe and pay television networks through
connecting to them over the municipal communications utility, with
these competitive networks (rather than a monopoly cable company)
deciding what packages viewers could choose (if any).
For some stations there will
be competition between these networks rebroadcasting some of the same
stations. I might be able to choose between CTV, CBC, Global and
some new entrants to access foreign networks such as BBC or FOX. These foreign networks may also set up Canadian subsidiaries to offer
subscribers direct access. For those subscribers who like the way
things are now, successors to cable companies can offer simple
one-stop-shopping bundles people could subscribe to and have someone
else manage any complexity.
Once this utility
infrastructure is in place, it will be trivial for new on-demand
subscription services for specific shows. I want to be able to
directly subscribe to a series like Defying
Gravity, another great science fiction show filmed in
Vancouver like BattleStar Gallactica was. This direct and more
predictable revenue could make it easier for producers to end the
uncertainty around the future of this great show. I'm really tired
of having less-than-scientific rating systems and (largely tuned-out)
executives of large networks deciding what programming will exist,
rather than more healthy communication/collaboration between the
creators and their fans/audiences.
The same type of thinking
applies to voice services as multimedia services. There are already
people promoting
competition (including "foreign") in
telecommunications, with a utility model making this much cheaper for
new entrants.
If we follow through with this
utility infrastructure it will be a win-win situation for content
creators, broadcasters and other Canadian citizens. The losers are
of course the monopoly phone and cable companies who will eventually
fade into memory like other obsolete companies.
---
Russell McOrmond is a self employed consultant,
policy coordinator for CLUE:
Canada's Association for Free/Libre and Open Source Software,
co-coordinator for Getting Open Source Logic INto Governments (GOSLING),
and host for Digital
Copyright Canada.