The LawBytes Podcast, Episode 36: The Year in Canadian Digital Law and Policy




Law Bytes show

Summary: The past year has been an incredibly active one for Canadian digital law and policy with important Supreme Court cases, legislative proposals, committee reports, expert panels, and political promises to reform existing laws and regulation. For this final Lawbytes podcast of 2019, I go solo without a guest to talk about the most significant trends and developments in Canadian digital policy from the past year and think a bit about what may lie ahead next year. I focus on five issues: the “euro-fication” of Canadian digital policy, the debate over the competitiveness of the Canadian wireless market, the many calls for privacy law reform, the future of Canadian copyright reform, and the review of Canadian broadcast and telecom law. The podcast can be downloaded here and is embedded below. Subscribe to the podcast via Apple Podcast, Google Play, Spotify or the RSS feed. Updates on the podcast on Twitter at @Lawbytespod. Show Notes: Ian R. Kerr Memorial Fund – the Kerr Fellows Ministerial Mandate Letters Prioritizing Competition: Navdeep Bains Tries to Flip Canada’s Telecom-Policy Script From Innovation to Regulation: Why the Liberals Have Lost Their Way on Digital Policy The Authoritative Canadian Copyright Review: Industry Committee Issues Balanced, Forward-Looking Report on the Future of Canadian Copyright Law Credits: Global News, Justin Trudeau Speaks on Canadians Detained in China, Combating Online Hate BNN Bloomberg, High Wireless, Data Costs in Canada ‘Have a Drag’ on the Economy: Expert Canadian Press, Privacy Commissioner Calls for New Measures to Protect Personal Information House of Commons, June 3, 2019 CBC News, Ottawa’s Fight with Netflix Reignites Age-Old Debate