Canada’s broadcasting regulator, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), plans to define “Canadian and Indigenous content” under new broadcasting-system regulations introduced by Bill C-11, the Online Streaming Act. The CRTC will begin with preliminary engagement sessions in the autumn of 2021 with media industry stakeholders scheduled to participate. The regulator will then proceed with public consultations in winter and early 2024. The consultations will focus on reviewing the definition of Canadian content, and other related issues, such as potential “tools to support Canadian music and other audio content.” The CRTC aims to introduce its new online regulatory framework by late 2024. The CRTC is also currently holding three public consultations to gather feedback on future policy in this framework. The consultations cover topics such as a public registry of streaming services, traditional broadcasters’ and online streaming services’ role in promoting Canadian and Indigenous content, and proposed “basic conditions” for certain online streaming services that do business in Canada. The CRTC’s ongoing consultations aim to ensure that online streaming services make meaningful contributions to Canadian and Indigenous content. They also seek to promote the wide distribution of Canadian and Indigenous “audio and video content” both domestically and internationally.