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Tuesday, November 5, 2024
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Tuesday, November 5, 2024 | Latest Paper

Mateo Larrazabal and Valere Gaspard

Time to rethink Bill C-10, step back, and answer: is the internet a public or private good?

Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault introduced the controversial BIll C-10 in November 2020 to modernize the Broadcasting Act. While there is a broad consensus among politicians that regulations desperately need to be modernized, there is little agreement on the status of the internet as a public or a private space, write Mateo Larrazabal and Valere Gaspard. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault introduced the controversial BIll C-10 in November 2020 to modernize the Broadcasting Act. While there is a broad consensus among politicians that regulations desperately need to be modernized, there is little agreement on the status of the internet as a public or a private space, write Mateo Larrazabal and Valere Gaspard. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault introduced the controversial BIll C-10 in November 2020 to modernize the Broadcasting Act. While there is a broad consensus among politicians that regulations desperately need to be modernized, there is little agreement on the status of the internet as a public or a private space, write Mateo Larrazabal and Valere Gaspard. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault introduced the controversial BIll C-10 in November 2020 to modernize the Broadcasting Act. While there is a broad consensus among politicians that regulations desperately need to be modernized, there is little agreement on the status of the internet as a public or a private space, write Mateo Larrazabal and Valere Gaspard. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade