AI strategy must prioritize trust as Canadians voice skepticism: watchdog | Page 858 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: Global News - Canada
Author: Sean Boynton
Publication Date: February 2, 2026 - 19:19

Stay informed

AI strategy must prioritize trust as Canadians voice skepticism: watchdog

February 2, 2026
Artificial Intelligence Minister Evan Solomon said the 'refreshed' AI strategy, which will be unveiled in the first quarter of this year, is rooted in the concept of 'AI for all.'


Unpublished Newswire

 
.text-block-underneath { text-align: center; } .main_housing p > a { text-decoration: underline !important; } .th-hero-container.hm-post-style-6 { display: none !important; } .text-block-underneath { color: #333; text-align: center; left: 0; right: 0; max-width: 874.75px; display: block; margin: 0 auto; } .text-block-underneath h4{ font-family: "GT Sectra"; font-size: 3rem; line-height: 3.5rem; } .text-block-underneath h2{ font-size: 0.88rem; font-weight: 900; font-family: "Source Sans Pro"; } .text-block-underneath p { text-transform: uppercase; } .text-block-underneath h3{...
February 25, 2026 - 06:30 | Pat Kane | Walrus
Over the past six years, I’ve lived in three towns that revolve around winter sports: Collingwood, Ontario, and its Blue Mountain Resort; Val-Morin in Quebec’s Laurentian Mountains, with nearby Sommet Saint-Sauveur resort; and Bromont, Quebec, with its montagne d’expériences. One of the first things I noticed, as someone who began learning how to snowboard in her late thirties, is how much of the snow wasn’t snow at all. Not exactly, at least. It’s not that the flakes aren’t real; they just don’t fall from the sky naturally. As soon as weather conditions permit—that is to say, the...
February 25, 2026 - 06:29 | Sheima Benembarek | Walrus
April 1985 What have you gotten yourself into now, indecisive daughter of dry land? You, crossing Barkley Sound by Zodiac with forty other pampered over-packers and Mrs. Roberts, all in Helox slickers, life preservers, olive Baffin boots, chilled awake and soon to be bored to tears (or puking fits or chants or bathroom fights or Stoli under fizzing bunkbed lights) by lectures on the lives of jellyfish or barnacles or nudibranchs or squid. You wish you chose the physics trip instead. What’s with all the action at the Station, all those films on salmon, salmon, salmon, waiting, mating,...
February 25, 2026 - 06:28 | Alexandra Oliver | Walrus