AI sovereignty isn’t the answer for Canada’s economic future
AI sovereignty isn’t the answer for Canada’s economic futureThe HubThe Hub Staff
AI sovereignty isn’t the answer for Canada’s economic futureThe HubThe Hub Staff
From Big Oil to Big Tech, American firms are tightening their grip on Canada’s economy — with Ottawa’s quiet approval
For a successful leap into digital sovereignty, Canadians must gain a new kind of literacy — tailored to an information ecosystem dominated by artificial intelligence.
What Does a ‘Sovereign Cloud’ Really Mean? | TechPolicy.PressEmily Osborne discusses approaches to building a “sovereign cloud” for Canada.Tech Policy PressEmily Osborne
Online inference engines are extracting our culture and selling it back to us at an exorbitant cost
Opinion: The United States is stealing Canada’s future, and nobody seems to noticeCanada is in danger of missing out on another technological revolutionThe Globe and MailLiam Gill
How National AI Clouds Undermine Democracy | TechPolicy.PressThe global rush toward digital sovereignty overlooks a significant and growing threat to the democracies it claims to defend, writes Vaibhav Chhimpa.Tech Policy PressVaibhav Chhimpa
In the last century, power flowed through railways, shipping routes and telegraph lines. Today, it is all digital
Margaret Atwood and others have called on Canada to protect its sovereignty. But is Mark Carney’s minister listening?Canada must protect its digital borders.Toronto StarJeremy Appel, Contributor
Progressive nationalism and the fight for Canadian sovereigntyThe threat to Canadian sovereignty is real and it demands a renewed analysis and a third wave of progressive nationalism to meet the challenges of the post-globalization era of authoritarian US imperialism. The fight for Canada is the central political issue of our
Geopolitics is forcing the data sovereignty issue and it might just be a good thingWhy organizations need to get data sovereignty rightTechRadarSteven Teasdale
Open source is global by design - Europe’s challenge is to keep it that wayEurope’s bid for digital sovereignty risks fragmenting the open source ecosystem if it drifts into protectionism. Gabriele Columbro, General Manager of Linux Foundation Europe, argues that the better path is to build commercial strength