Quebec Superior Court Strikes Down ‘Unconstitutional’ Online Gambling ISP-Blocking Scheme
Posted on: July 25, 2018, 09:00h.
Last updated on: July 25, 2018, 07:54h.
The Quebec government’s bid to force internet service providers to block online gambling websites has suffered a near-fatal blow in the province’s Superior Court.
The court had “no hesitation” in ruling that the government’s Bill 74, passed in 2016, was unconstitutional because oversight of the telecommunications industry falls under the remit of federal not provincial government.
The bill would have authorized the province-owned lottery and online gaming monopoly Loto-Quebec to draw up a blacklist of some 2,200 unlicensed gaming sites, which ISPs would have been ordered to block. Failure to so would have resulted in a fine of CA$100,000 ($76,000) per infringement.
For net neutrality advocates, Bill 74’s proposed ISP-blocking was an assault on consumer freedom. For the ISPs themselves, it was a massive pain in the neck.
ISPs argued that building a “firewall” around Quebec would be expensive and impractical, requiring networks to be rebuilt from the ground up, causing havoc to their infrastructures. The costs would be passed onto the consumer, they warned.
ISP-Blocking a Federal Violation
In July 2017, the Canadian Wireless Telecommunications Association (CWTA) sued the Quebec government and ISP-blocking was put on hold until the case was resolved.
In a judgment last week, Justice Pierre Nollet agreed with the industry body, ruling that Bill 74 was a violation of the Telecommunications Act which expressly bestows jurisdiction over telecoms providers on the federal Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission alone.
The act also states that “a Canadian carrier shall not control the content or influence the meaning or purpose of telecommunications carried by it for the public.”
Bill 74 Not About Consumer Protection
Nollet also found the government’s justification for Bill 74 – that its aim was to protect consumers from unlicensed online gambling sites – to be disingenuous
Its pith and substance is to prevent online gambling not set up and operated by the province from being ‘communicated’ by ISPs and not the protection of consumers or their health,” he wrote.
Quebec’s minister of finance, Carlos Leit?o, has estimated that ISP-blocking could add up to CA$27 million ($20 million) in revenues per year for Loto Quebec’s Espacejeux, the only online gambling site authorized by the government.
CWTA’s manager of government relations, Tiéoulé Traoré, praised the judge’s decision this week.
“This decision is important as we feel it will help send a strong message of regulatory certainty, and increase the incentives for facilities-based investment in Quebec and elsewhere in Canada,” he said. “We have always been clear that Canadians are better served by a proportionate and symmetrical set of federal regulations than a patchwork of provincial regulations.”
The government has not said whether it intends to appeal the decision.
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