On Feb 13 TekSavvy called out the CRTC over breaking their own rules and standards in their 2018 public report. We asked them why and pressed for greater transparency for this key source of evidence.
The CRTC’s reply failed to answer questions about why the Communications Monitoring Report broke the rules, and the CRTC reply makes it clear that they have no intention of fixing it. That of course is a problem, and TekSavvy isn’t the only one who thinks that:
Hopefully the CRTC comes to their senses and changes course on this front as clearly they don’t have the interests of Canadians in mind.
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This entry was posted on March 6, 2019 at 9:38 pm and is filed under Commentary with tags CRTC, Teksavvy. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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Fallout From Flawed CRTC Public Report Continues
On Feb 13 TekSavvy called out the CRTC over breaking their own rules and standards in their 2018 public report. We asked them why and pressed for greater transparency for this key source of evidence.
The CRTC’s reply failed to answer questions about why the Communications Monitoring Report broke the rules, and the CRTC reply makes it clear that they have no intention of fixing it. That of course is a problem, and TekSavvy isn’t the only one who thinks that:
Hopefully the CRTC comes to their senses and changes course on this front as clearly they don’t have the interests of Canadians in mind.
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Related
This entry was posted on March 6, 2019 at 9:38 pm and is filed under Commentary with tags CRTC, Teksavvy. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.