Canada’s AI bill needs to catch up to get ahead of the curve

MPs and committee members have the summer to think about how they can better modernize our approach to governing AI.
Improving Bill C-27, and fighting cyber threats facing Canada

Addressing concerns about privacy rights and their impact on joining the digital economy needs an approach involving government, industry, and civil society.
Canadians’ digital safety calls for strong whistleblower and security researcher protection

When crafting digital policies to protect Canadians, the protection of whistleblowers and public interest researchers has been a major blindspot.
Necessary but not enough: Canada’s proposed new private-sector privacy law

Advances in technology and changes in business models have altered the role of data and how value is extracted from it.
How government can restore public confidence in our privacy rights

If the government truly wants to show Canadians that our privacy rights matter, it needs to pass strong data protection laws as soon as possible.
The ground rules for the industrial adoption of AI

The government is co-ordinating programs and policies to ensure that AI is developed safely and responsibly in Canada for Canadians.
Economic damage mounts from failure to fight anti-competitive business practices

Competition Commissioner Matthew Boswell’s latest report says the current state of the grocery business hurts consumers and does not drive companies to lower their prices.
Lobbying watchdog seeks more tools to penalize lobbyists who file late

Bélanger’s report notes not all errors are equal, with current penalties either ‘nothing or sending it to the RCMP.’
What does meaningful recognition look like?

It is important to imagine reconciliation as a verb, a process toward something as well as a pathway out of something—the colonial state and its violence.
The possible shape of economic reconciliation

In order for Nunavut to thrive, we need to break our reliance on the federal government by generating wealth.