If you have a smartphone or use the Internet at home, this could be an important week.
The CRTC will review cost structure during public hearings in Quebec that are expected to last five days.
The source of the issue is whether "differential pricing" is fair. That's when a provider allows you to stream certain content as much as you want without it counting towards your data.
Critics argue it violates net neutrality and allows providers to favour one service over another.
Opponents to "differential pricing" insist it allows providers to impose rules and limits on customers and, in turn, artificially inflates the cost of data.
Advocates argue it allows for data services to be kept more affordable. "[They say] that if they're banned from allowing these services on their rate structures than everyone is going to be charged more for their data," explains tech analyst Carmi Levy.
The CRTC will also be asked to ban data caps, altogether.
Levy warns that may sound good but there is a downfall. "Canadians will, by definition, use more data which will put more strain on wireless networks. That could drive prices up because telecommunications companies will then have to build more capacity into their networks."
Between 2014 and 2015 Canadians use of broadband spiked 40 per cent; mobile data saw an increase of 44 per cent.