CRTC approves interim 911 service in Yukon

The CRTC said Friday it has approved an interim 911 service in the Yukon that will allow residents to dial that number, instead of a seven-digit phone number used by some responders, to reach all emergency personnel.

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CNOC says wholesale wireline rates must be ‘fixed now’

On the last day of the CRTC’s hearing into the wholesale wireline market, representatives from Canada’s third-party Internet service providers reiterated their request that, while other regulations can wait, wholesale prices need to be “fixed now”.

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TV viewing down 25% among young U.S. adults: Nielsen

Nielsen Co. numbers show that viewership of traditional TV is dropping significantly among Americans 18 to 24.

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Early problems emerge with Shomi service

Some TV-industry analysts who are among the early adopters of Rogers Communications Inc.'s and Shaw Communications Inc.’s Shomi are detailing problems they've experienced with the streaming service in its first weeks.

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Lisa de Wilde to join Telus board

Telus Corp. on Thursday said that Lisa de Wilde will join its board of directors on Feb. 1.

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Xplornet claims to have fastest rural fixed-wireless Internet

Xplornet Communications Inc. on Wednesday announced 25 Mbps service on fixed-wireless Internet service in rural parts of New Brunswick, making its service the fastest among comparable products in Canada.

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Federal bill raises stakes on copper theft

The Canadian Electricity Association on Wednesday praised a Conservative MP's private member's bill that treats copper theft from key infrastructure more seriously.

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Bell’s Kevin Crull happy with ‘business case’ for $4 CraveTV

The $4-a-month price tag for CraveTV, Bell Media’s new streaming service, is part of the company’s attempt to differentiate itself from competitors, according to Kevin Crull, president of BCE Inc.’s media division.

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CRTC urged to look toward future on wireline regulation

GATINEAU, Que. — On Wednesday, the first day of replies in the CRTC’s wholesale wireline hearing, the regulator was consistently asked to look to the future in determining how best to regulate Canada's fibre and copper connections. Yet the groups presenting before the commission differed on what that future entails.

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Rogers VP calls CNOC’s arguments on wholesale rates ‘absurd’

GATINEAU, Que. — Rogers Communications Inc.'s senior vice-president of regulatory affairs, Ken Engelhart, on Tuesday attacked some of the arguments made on behalf of smaller Internet service providers during CRTC's hearing on wholesale wireline services.

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