Canadian media policy moves at the speed of consensus. Media markets move at the speed of product cycles. That gap is no longer survivable.
Over the past decade, Canada has leaned heavily on consultation as the primary mechanism for managing media disruption. Parliamentary reviews. Regulatory proceedings. Stakeholder submissions. Framework revisions. Each step is defensible in isolation. Collectively, they have produced a system that reacts years after the market has already moved on.
Velocity has become the hidden casualty.
The Online Streaming Act is a clear example: Canada spent years talking about “modernizing” broadcasting rules before any real regulatory direction started to harden into something actionable. During that time, global streaming platforms didn’t wait. They normalized subscription-first relationships, embedded themselves at the device and operating-system level, and scaled recommendation systems that now function as the primary gatekeepers of attention. By the time consultation concluded, leverage had already consolidated.
The Online News Act exposed the velocity mismatch even more starkly. The legislative process unfolded slowly and publicly. Platform responses were fast and unilateral. Meta removed news links in Canada within weeks. Canadian publishers were forced into immediate, tactical adaptation, traffic mitigation, audience re-routing and emergency revenue adjustments all while the policy conversation continued largely unchanged.
Consultation produced legitimacy. Platforms exercised control. The contrast couldn’t be clearer.
Canadian media policy assumes deliberation precedes impact. Platform economics assume impact precedes deliberation. One side optimizes for process; the other for iteration and only one of those logics compounds advantage.
You can see this same pattern in regulatory follow-through. After legislation passes, the real work moves to bodies like the CRTC; rulemaking, hearings, compliance frameworks, exemptions, and appeals. These processes are measured in months and years. Meanwhile, platforms continue to adjust algorithms, ad products, discovery surfaces, and monetization rules on rolling timelines measured in days or weeks.
Media organizations live in between.
Investment decisions stall while rules remain in flux. Infrastructure bets get postponed. Operators hedge instead of commit. Meanwhile, platforms continue shipping, learning, and locking in behavior. Even when regulatory outcomes eventually favour Canadian media, they arrive into a market that has already adapted around them.
There’s also a second-order effect that’s harder to quantify but deeply corrosive: prolonged consultation trains the sector to wait. To defer structural decisions until clarity arrives. To treat uncertainty as something that will be resolved externally rather than something to be navigated through action.
Over time, waiting becomes the default posture. Speed, meanwhile, is treated as a liability. Risk is framed primarily in reputational terms; what if the policy isn’t perfect, what if consequences are uneven, what if platforms react badly. Those concerns are real. But they crowd out another risk: the cost of delay in a market where infrastructure hardens quickly. Canadian media pays that cost daily.
The irony is that consultation is often justified as a way to protect media. In practice, it has become a brake on media’s ability to adapt. By the time protective measures land, the systems they aim to influence are already deeply entrenched.
This doesn’t mean consultation has no value. It means consultation has been overused as a substitute for decisive action. Process has replaced velocity as the organizing principle of media policy.
Platforms do not wait for certainty. They ship, observe, adjust, and ship again. Canadian media, constrained by regulatory timelines and dependent infrastructure, is left responding rather than shaping.
In a media economy defined by rapid iteration, slow legitimacy is not protection.
It is exposure.
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