Information Communication Technology

Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.

OpenAI avoided a costly court loss to Elon Musk, but neither side is unscathed

Barbara Ortutay, The Associated Press 4 minute read Preview

OpenAI avoided a costly court loss to Elon Musk, but neither side is unscathed

Barbara Ortutay, The Associated Press 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 20, 2026

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — After prevailing in its court fight with Elon Musk, OpenAI — the ChatGPT maker valued at $852 billion — remains on track for what could be one of the largest initial public offerings in history.

Musk had been seeking the ouster of his fellow OpenAI co-founder, CEO Sam Altman, among other changes to the company. But with testimony from witnesses who called Altman dishonest, he’s hardly emerged unscathed.

At a time of growing concern about artificial intelligence's impacts, the landmark trial also shed new light on the flaws and outsize ambitions of the small number of billionaires steering the development of the breakthrough technology.

The trial was a reminder, said Sarah Kreps, director of Cornell University’s Tech Policy Institute, “of how much the future of AI still depends on a remarkably small group of powerful tech figures and their personal rivalries.”

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Wednesday, May. 20, 2026

$61-M investment in high-speed Internet planned for northern First Nations

Carol Sanders 4 minute read Preview

$61-M investment in high-speed Internet planned for northern First Nations

Carol Sanders 4 minute read Friday, May. 15, 2026

More homes on remote Manitoba First Nations will have access to high-speed Internet that most Canadians take for granted thanks to $61 million in new federal funding.

“Your communities have been living way too long without internet,” federal Northern and Arctic Affairs Minister Rebecca Chartrand told a gathering at Wasagamack Anisininew Nation Thursday. The MP for northern Manitoba said the four projects will deliver modern, reliable internet to 2,309 households.

“This really is a public safety issue and an equity issue,” Chartrand said in the community 600 kilometres north of Winnipeg that’s accessible by air, water and winter road.

“The lack of broadband has been a public safety failure. When families can’t call for help or nurses can’t access files or lives are at risk when you’re travelling roads without phone service, without internet,” she said.

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Friday, May. 15, 2026
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Shot-in-Manitoba films ready to screen, stream

Randall King 4 minute read Preview
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Shot-in-Manitoba films ready to screen, stream

Randall King 4 minute read Friday, May. 15, 2026

This has been a big year for film and TV shot in Winnipeg, with fare such as the comedic gangster film Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice topping the streaming charts when it debuted in March on Hulu/Disney+, with more than 300 million views worldwide.

Smaller indie films, such as Johnny Ma’s The Mother and the Bear, and James McLellan and Alexandre (Sasha) Trudeau’s dramatic feature Hair of the Bear also got long-awaited screen time in the first quarter of the year, as did Rhayne Vermette’s experimental feature Levers.

After the Bob Odenkirk thriller Normal becomes available Tuesday, expect more locally shot fare to come to cinemas, or your TV screen, in the months ahead.

 

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Friday, May. 15, 2026
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Tories question CBC funding of spoof-style Indigenous show on residential schools

Alessia Passafiume, The Canadian Press 7 minute read Preview
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Tories question CBC funding of spoof-style Indigenous show on residential schools

Alessia Passafiume, The Canadian Press 7 minute read Friday, May. 15, 2026

OTTAWA - Conservatives are questioning why CBC is funding a spoof program that used false pretences to lure high-profile people accused of downplaying the damage caused by residential schools into sitting for interviews.

Several current and former Conservative politicians have gone on social media to denounce the production “Northland Tales." The show is being produced for CBC and APTN.

The show is described by the Indigenous Screen Office — which works to increase Indigenous media representation using federal funding — as a satire program meant to “flip the script” on modern and historical injustices against Indigenous Peoples.

Frances Widdowson, who has described herself as a “known controversial figure” and has publicly questioned the history of residential schools and unmarked graves of children at the site of a former school in Kamloops, described her interview for the show in a video posted to social media this week.

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Friday, May. 15, 2026

Bell CEO ‘confident’ in lofty revenue targets as it doubles down on AI data centres

Sammy Hudes, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Preview

Bell CEO ‘confident’ in lofty revenue targets as it doubles down on AI data centres

Sammy Hudes, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Saturday, May. 9, 2026

Bell Canada's parent company has upped its revenue target for its growing AI business by a third as it moves forward with plans to build a cluster of data centres, while assuring it will maintain "responsible usage" of the technology.

BCE Inc. chief executive Mirko Bibic said Thursday that with the recent announcement of a 300-megawatt data centre in rural Saskatchewan, the company now expects to generate around $2 billion in revenue from its portfolio of AI-powered enterprise solutions by 2028.

That's up from its previous objective of $1.5 billion in revenue over three years.

"We're confident in that target and frankly, I see potential beyond it," Bibic told analysts on a conference call as BCE reported its first-quarter results, which included a profit attributable to common shareholders of $616 million or 66 cents per diluted share.

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Saturday, May. 9, 2026

Manitoba right-to-repair legislation sparks sector concerns

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Monday, May. 4, 2026

Proposed right-to-repair legislation could lead to fewer household appliances on offer, a retail association warns.

Structured approach needed with tech

Jo Ann Unger and Michelle Warren 4 minute read Monday, May. 4, 2026

Families need our help and support. Technology has done many things to better our world; from life-saving medical advances to connecting people across the world to efficiencies in our everyday lives.

Breaking the digital blockade

Greg Arndt 4 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

In the world of logistics, there is a saying: “You don’t notice the infrastructure until it fails.”

For the thousands of Manitoba truck drivers who cross the 49th parallel every week — including our team at Jade Transport — the “invisible” infrastructure has been failing far too often.

Currently, Manitoba sits at an extraordinary geographical and economic crossroads. We must applaud Prime Minister Mark Carney and Premier Wab Kinew for their leadership regarding the Churchill Plus project.

By committing to a year-round Arctic gateway and streamlining regulatory hurdles, they are building a trimodal powerhouse that links rail, road and sea to the global North.

Liberals shut down committee debate on $6.6-billion IT project

Catherine Morrison, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview

Liberals shut down committee debate on $6.6-billion IT project

Catherine Morrison, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

OTTAWA - Opposition MPs say the Liberals used their new power as a majority government Thursday to shelve debate on calls for the government to provide documents about a $6.6 billion IT project that has gone far over budget.

While the project to modernize the systems the government uses to deliver benefits to Canadians, such as old age security, launched in 2017 with a $1.7 billion budget, the cost is now more than three times that sum.

Last week, the House of Commons human resources committee debated a Bloc Québécois motion to have the government produce documents about the project.

When the committee convened Thursday, the Liberals instead pushed forward with clause by clause consideration of an unrelated bill, without providing any notice to the rest of the committee of that plan.

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Friday, May. 1, 2026

Elon Musk takes stand in trial vs. Sam Altman that could reshape AI’s future

Barbara Ortutay, The Associated Press 6 minute read Preview

Elon Musk takes stand in trial vs. Sam Altman that could reshape AI’s future

Barbara Ortutay, The Associated Press 6 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Elon Musk, the Tesla CEO, world's richest man and OpenAI cofounder, took the stand Tuesday in a high-stakes trial revolving around a bitter feud with his former friend Sam Altman that could reshape the future development of artificial intelligence.

His testimony at the Oakland, California, federal courthouse kicked off a legal drama that is expected to brim with intrigue and potentially embarrassing details about the two tech moguls. Musk filed the lawsuit against Altman and his top lieutenant, Greg Brockman, along with Microsoft over its investments in OpenAI, in 2024.

“Fundamentally, I think they’re going to try to make this lawsuit ... very complicated, but it’s actually very simple,” Musk said. “Which is that it's not OK to steal a charity.”

The nine-person jury was selected Monday and the trial is scheduled to take three weeks.

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Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026

Community tip line making difference, but funds about to dry up, organizer says

Tyler Searle 5 minute read Preview

Community tip line making difference, but funds about to dry up, organizer says

Tyler Searle 5 minute read Monday, Apr. 27, 2026

Six months after launching a community-run crime tip line in William Whyte, the group behind the initiative is preparing to ask the province for additional funding to keep the program alive.

Darrell Warren, president of the William Whyte Neighbourhood Association, said $20,000 provided through the provincial property crime forfeiture fund last year will dry up in May.

“It’s a big asset. I didn’t think it would be as popular as it is,” Warren said Monday.

“There are a lot of good people in these neighbourhoods who are affected by this stuff and they do want to get involved. This gives them the tools they need. The police are stretched to the limits right now and we need to be those eyes and ears out in the neighbourhood.”

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Monday, Apr. 27, 2026

Lots of accolades, little details in Kinew’s proposed social media ban

Dan Lett 5 minute read Preview

Lots of accolades, little details in Kinew’s proposed social media ban

Dan Lett 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

Premier Wab Kinew made national news headlines on the weekend when he promised to institute a ban on social media use by youth. Although Ottawa and several other provinces have promised similar efforts, the industrious Manitoba premier beat them to the punch and the accolades.

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Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

Manitoba education minister says social media ban could start in schools

Brittany Hobson, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview

Manitoba education minister says social media ban could start in schools

Brittany Hobson, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

WINNIPEG - Manitoba could turn to classrooms as the first place to ban children from using social media and artificial intelligence chatbots, and one young advocate is urging the province to work with those it's aiming to protect.

Tracy Schmidt, the province's education minister, says Manitobans can expect to see the ban's first phase rolled out in schools, likening it to when the government first banned cellphones in classrooms in 2024.

"This is very early days. A step like this is going to certainly take legislative and regulatory processes," Schmidt said at an unrelated event Monday.

"But I know that something we're talking about right away is how we can roll this out in schools as soon as possible."

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Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman head to court in high-stakes showdown over AI

Barbara Ortutay And Michael Liedtke, The Associated Press 6 minute read Preview

Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman head to court in high-stakes showdown over AI

Barbara Ortutay And Michael Liedtke, The Associated Press 6 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Technology tycoons Elon Musk and Sam Altman are poised to face off in a high-stakes trial revolving around the alleged betrayal, deceit and unbridled ambition that blurred the bickering billionaires' once-shared vision for the development of artificial intelligence.

The trial, which started Monday with jury selection, centers on the 2015 birth of ChatGPT maker OpenAI as a nonprofit startup primarily funded by Musk before evolving into a capitalistic venture now valued at $852 billion.

The trial's outcome could sway the balance of power in AI — breakthrough technology that is increasingly being feared as a potential job killer and an existential threat to humanity's survival.

Those perceived risks are among the reasons that Musk, the world's richest person, cites for filing an August 2024 lawsuit that will now be decided by a jury and U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers in Oakland, California.

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Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

Advocates praise move to ban social media use among youths

Nicole Buffie 5 minute read Preview

Advocates praise move to ban social media use among youths

Nicole Buffie 5 minute read Sunday, Apr. 26, 2026

Child advocates are praising the Manitoba government for announcing its intention to ban the use of social media and artificial intelligence chatbots for youths.

Premier Wab Kinew told a crowd at a party event Saturday night the NDP government will move to restrict children from using social media accounts and artificial intelligence chatbots. The proposal is intended to protect kids from technology platforms that he says hurt their development.

Details on the plan are scant, like the age limit he is considering or how a ban would be enforced. He did not speak to reporters after his speech and was not available for comment Sunday.

Kinew’s director of communications, Amy Tuckett-McGimpsey, said the premier will likely speak more about the idea in the coming days.

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Sunday, Apr. 26, 2026

Meta slashes 8,000 jobs, or 10% of its workforce, as Microsoft offers buyouts

Matt O'brien And Barbara Ortutay, The Associated Press 2 minute read Preview

Meta slashes 8,000 jobs, or 10% of its workforce, as Microsoft offers buyouts

Matt O'brien And Barbara Ortutay, The Associated Press 2 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

Meta is laying off about 8,000 workers, or about 10% of its workforce, the company said Thursday as it continues to ramp up spending on artificial intelligence infrastructure and highly paid AI-expert hires.

The company said it was making the cuts for the sake of efficiency and to allow new investments in parts of its business, as first reported by Bloomberg, which also said the company will leave about 6,000 jobs unfilled.

Also Thursday, Microsoft said it was offering voluntary buyouts to thousands of its U.S. employees.

The software giant plans to make the offers in early May to about 8,750 people, or 7% of its U.S. workforce, according to two people familiar with the plan who were not authorized to speak about it publicly.

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Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

Manitoba crypto companies say provincial plans would put them out of business

Steve Lambert, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview

Manitoba crypto companies say provincial plans would put them out of business

Steve Lambert, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

WINNIPEG - Manitoba's plan to charge cryptocurrency operations higher electricity rates and curtail power at peak times will drive businesses under, officials with two companies told a legislature committee.

"If this goes through, our business goes bankrupt and a lot of families will be impacted," Guildo Theriault, co-founder and chief executive officer of Gator Mining, told a committee hearing Wednesday night.

The government has introduced two bills in the legislature that are aimed at controlling the growing demand on Crown-owned Manitoba Hydro's electrical grid.

One bill would charge cryptocurrency operations and data centres up to 100 per cent higher rates for electricity. The other would allow Manitoba Hydro to temporarily reduce power to cryptocurrency operators at peak times in order to ensure stability of the grid.

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Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

Why Canada’s media economy is bleeding

Sarah Thompson 4 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 22, 2026

Canadian policymakers often focus on natural resources, telecommunications and automotive manufacturing when talking about the country’s economic pillars. However, there is another major industry that employs more people than some of these sectors, even as it steadily loses money.

Right now, the Canadian media and advertising sector is facing serious challenges. The 2026 Canadian Media Means Business (CMMB) report shows that in 2024, the sector provided 137,600 direct jobs.

That’s more than auto manufacturing, telecommunications and almost 40 per cent more than mining. Including indirect and related jobs, the sector adds $22.6 billion to Canada’s GDP.

Even though the industry is a big part of the economy, there is now a major gap between how much Canadians use media and how much money stays in Canada.

After facing the death of its dominant newspaper, Pittsburgh’s media has a surprising turnaround

David Bauder, The Associated Press 8 minute read Preview

After facing the death of its dominant newspaper, Pittsburgh’s media has a surprising turnaround

David Bauder, The Associated Press 8 minute read Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026

PITTSBURGH (AP) — In the space of a couple of weeks this spring, Pittsburgh media has lived through a near-death experience and a resurrection.

Owners of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette last week announced the newspaper's sale to a nonprofit foundation that said it was committed to keeping it open. A news outlet that predates the U.S. Constitution was due to close on May 3, which would have made the Steel City the nation's largest community without a city-based paper.

Weeks earlier, the alternative Pittsburgh City Paper, whose staff learned on New Year's Day that it was closing after 34 years, roared back to life under new ownership.

They were rare positive developments for a local news industry that has seen its share of the opposite over the past two decades — newsrooms shuttered or thinned out, journalists thrown out of work, consumers drifting away. No one is pretending that a true turnaround will be easy in Pittsburgh. One thing that may help is that the city faced a news abyss and was forced to prepare for it.

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Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026

Indigenous Winnipeggers undercounted, underserved: report

Scott Billeck 5 minute read Preview

Indigenous Winnipeggers undercounted, underserved: report

Scott Billeck 5 minute read Friday, Apr. 17, 2026

Winnipeg’s First Nations and Métis population may be vastly undercounted, raising questions about how governments fund services for Indigenous communities, a new report says.

The new estimate, contained in the “Our Health Counts First Nations & Métis Winnipeg” report, says the population could be four times larger than what was recorded by the 2021 census. The report pegs the population of First Nations and Métis people in Winnipeg at between 248,000 and 379,000 people based on its survey of 1,090 adults and 306 children, most of whom identified as First Nations or Métis.

In contrast, the 2021 census recorded 90,000 Indigenous people in the city.

The study was produced by a partnership of the Aboriginal Health and Wellness Centre of Winnipeg, the Well Living House Action Research Centre, and Indigenous health organizations.

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Friday, Apr. 17, 2026

AI-rendered Val Kilmer debuts in ‘As Deep as the Grave’ trailer

Lindsey Bahr, The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview

AI-rendered Val Kilmer debuts in ‘As Deep as the Grave’ trailer

Lindsey Bahr, The Associated Press 3 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

LAS VEGAS (AP) — The filmmakers behind “As Deep as the Grave,” the indie film that is using an artificial intelligence-rendered version of Val Kilmer in a prominent role, debuted a first look at the recreated actor Wednesday at CinemaCon in Las Vegas.

“Don’t fear the dead and don’t fear me,” Kilmer’s character, Father Fintan, a Catholic priest and Native American spiritualist, says at the end of the trailer.

The actor died last year at 65, of pneumonia. The use of generative AI to recreate Kilmer for the historical drama based on archaeologists Ann and Earl Morris became a hot button topic when the filmmakers announced it last month. The trailer shows Kilmer’s character at various ages.

Writer-director Coerte Voorhees, along with his brother John, spoke on a panel Wednesday about the controversial decision to use technology to create a performance from a deceased actor and explained why they feel they've done it ethically by working with Kilmer's children and the actors union. Coerte Voorhees stopped short of calling it a Val Kilmer performance, however.

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Thursday, May. 7, 2026

AP says it will offer buyouts as part of pivot away from newspaper-focused history

David Bauder, The Associated Press 6 minute read Preview

AP says it will offer buyouts as part of pivot away from newspaper-focused history

David Bauder, The Associated Press 6 minute read Saturday, May. 2, 2026

The Associated Press, one of the world's oldest and most influential news organizations, said Monday it is offering buyouts to an unspecified number of its U.S.-based journalists as part of an acceleration away from the focus on newspapers and their print journalism that sustained the company since the mid-1800s.

The News Media Guild, the union that represents AP journalists, said more than 120 of the staff members it represents received buyout offers on Monday.

The news organization is becoming more focused on visual journalism and developing new revenue sources, particularly through companies investing in artificial intelligence, to cope with the economic collapse of many legacy news outlets. Once the lion’s share of AP’s revenue, big newspaper companies now account for 10% of its income.

“We’re not a newspaper company and we haven’t been for quite some time,” Julie Pace, executive editor and senior vice president of the AP, said in an interview.

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Saturday, May. 2, 2026

Why one Las Vegas newspaper just stopped printing its rival

Jessica Hill, The Associated Press 5 minute read Preview

Why one Las Vegas newspaper just stopped printing its rival

Jessica Hill, The Associated Press 5 minute read Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026

LAS VEGAS (AP) — The Las Vegas Review-Journal announced Friday that it will no longer print its rival the Las Vegas Sun for the first time in decades, sharpening their legal dispute over the nation’s last joint operating agreement stemming from a 1970 law designed to preserve newspapers.

Readers “will not find a printed Las Vegas Sun insert inside,” the Review-Journal wrote in an editorial, noting the Sun maintains a website, has a few hundred thousand followers across social media platforms, and is free to produce its own newspaper.

“We encourage them to do so. The Review-Journal competes with countless sources of news and entertainment, but we would welcome one more. We just don’t want to foot the bill. It is time the Sun stood up on its own two feet,” the editorial said, without specifying the cost.

It was the first day in 76 years the Sun hasn’t been printed, Sun attorney Leif Reid said in an email.

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Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026

Apple’s 50-year odyssey has redefined technology, pop culture and comeback stories

Michael Liedtke, The Associated Press 6 minute read Preview

Apple’s 50-year odyssey has redefined technology, pop culture and comeback stories

Michael Liedtke, The Associated Press 6 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

CUPERTINO, Calif. (AP) — A scrawny hippie and a nerdy engineer who became prank-playing friends vowed to change the world when they founded a Silicon Valley startup on April Fools' Day 50 years ago and then — no joke — pulled it off.

The improbable odyssey began April 1, 1976, when a then-shaggy Steve Jobs and his gadget-tinkering friend Steve Wozniak signed a two-page partnership document that created Apple Computer Co.

Jobs, a 21-year-old college dropout, and Wozniak, a 25-year-old Hewlett-Packard employee, each received a 45% stake in Apple, with the remaining 10% going to their 41-year-old adviser, Ron Wayne.

The company got off to such a shaky start while trying to build a personal computer in the Los Altos, California, home of Jobs' parents that Wayne relinquished his stake for $2,300. It proved to be a $370 billion mistake, based on how much his holdings would have grown now that Apple boasts a $3.7 trillion market value.

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Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026