Toronto Star

Digital border keeping services out of Canada

- RAJU MUDHAR TECH REPORTER

Five well-known providers have various reasons for not bringing content northward

There may be no better advertisin­g for an online service here than saying "not available in Canada."

It may be a World Wide Web, but there are still many reasons that companies choose to launch in other countries — or consider our country an afterthoug­ht.

Our relatively small population is one obvious reason, but we are one of the web-savviest countries in the world with a fairly advanced user base. Some of these services will probably get around to launching in Canada, while others can find ways of making more revenue by staying out.

Here are five high-profile services and why they currently don’t bother with Canada. HBO GO app The much-coveted online-only service of HBO became available in the U.S. this year, giving many cord cutters a new option to get access to shows such as Game of Thrones.

As to whether it will come to Canada, it is somewhat unlikely, as this premium content is now being split up by Canadian rights holders. The Movie Network has access to the series that it airs, while CraveTV has exclusive Canadian rights to the company’s back catalogue. So in some ways, it is already here, although in a piecemeal manner. Until those deals expire, it probably won’t be here as a stand-alone product. Pandora The company’s service was in Canada for years before pulling up virtual stakes in 2007 reportedly over difficulty obtaining music rights. Pandora recently bought the assets of Rdio — one of the things that probably appealed was the fact that it was available in more than 60 countries, which has fuelled rumours of internatio­nal expansion for Pandora.

Pandora is currently an Internet radio service as opposed to a fullfledge­d music streaming service — which is why it has Adele and Spotify doesn’t — so some analysts believe the company will stick with that approach as opposed to going head to head with the likes of Spotify and Apple Music. But there are others who feel that this publicly traded company needs to broaden its user base, and internatio­nal expansion and an increased feature set will be necessary. Amazon Prime Amazon Prime is already here too, although in Canada, it is only the expedited two-day delivery service for an annual fee of $80.

In the U.S., in addition to the delivery services, customers also get access to Amazon Prime’s streaming service, which has been creating buzzworthy series including Transparen­t and new The Man in the High Castle adaptation. There is also a music service. In the U.S., Amazon uses these media bundles as enticement­s for customers to buy Amazon tablets, and as media that keep customers in the company’s ecosystem.

Similar to HBO, the shows created for Amazon Prime are getting picked up by Canadian streaming services, like Transparen­t, which is available on Shomi. As long as there are paying customers for those series, it’s probably not in Amazon’s interest to bring its media services to Canada. YouTube Red YouTube has just launched a new paid subscripti­on service that allows people to watch YouTube without the advertisem­ents. It also has a number of other features, such as allowing offline video play, playing music in the background on your devices and even access to Google Play Music, for $9.99.

That all seems like a pretty good deal, but it is currently only available in the U.S. and U.K. There actually is a fairly good possibilit­y that this will come to Canada, as YouTube likes to launch in a few territorie­s and build out. A perfect example is YouTube’s Kid apps, which launched in the U.S. in February, but just became available in Canada in November, so there is a chance that they will eventually come here in time. Hulu The first great online video experiment from the big U.S. networks has previously eyed internatio­nal expansion, but other than Japan, this remains a U.S.-only venture.

Jointly owned by Disney, Fox and NBC Universal, there are two big reasons that it’s not available in Canada: our small size and relatively small online advertisin­g market. Once again, several of the series on the service have been served up by various Canadian rights holders, so it is basically impossible to put them all in one online place here, because competing networks control those rights.

Of interest is the case of The Mindy Project, which was cancelled on FOX but picked up by Hulu for its latest season. Canadian fans were worried, but Citytv chose to continue to broadcast it here.

 ?? HEIDI GUTMAN/NBC/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Because Pandora is technicall­y an Internet radio service, rather than a music-streaming site, it can carry songs by Adele whereas Spotify can’t.
HEIDI GUTMAN/NBC/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Because Pandora is technicall­y an Internet radio service, rather than a music-streaming site, it can carry songs by Adele whereas Spotify can’t.
 ?? DANNY MOLOSHOK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? YouTube Red is only available in the U.S. and U.K., but that may change.
DANNY MOLOSHOK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO YouTube Red is only available in the U.S. and U.K., but that may change.
 ?? AMAZON STUDIOS ?? Fans of Transparen­t can watch it on Shomi rather than Amazon Prime.
AMAZON STUDIOS Fans of Transparen­t can watch it on Shomi rather than Amazon Prime.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada