How algorithms shape our online experience
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
A Florida lawsuit and AI’s complicity in killing
4 minute read Preview Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDTStudents compete to be ‘Reality Champion’
5 minute read Preview Monday, May. 11, 2026The barista is human but an AI agent runs this experimental Swedish cafe
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, May. 12, 2026Health advice is all over social media. Here’s how to vet claims
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, May. 12, 2026Foreign actors producing more false content about Alberta separatism: report
3 minute read Preview Thursday, May. 7, 2026Delaying access to social media
4 minute read Tuesday, May. 5, 2026An 11-year-old boy is threatened with the distribution of nude images unless he pays an international extortionist who found him on TikTok. A 12-year-old girl is relentlessly pressured by someone she believed was a friend to expose herself on camera. A 14-year-old boy is unravelling — failing classes, withdrawing from life — because his friend is being exploited on Roblox and he feels powerless to help.
These are not outliers. In 2025 alone, Cybertip.ca processed more than 28,000 reports. These are just three.
Canada’s children are not stumbling into harm by accident. They are being systematically exposed to it — on platforms engineered to capture their attention, monetize their vulnerability and retain their engagement at all costs. The scale and severity of harm now demand more than incremental reform. They demand intervention.
For over 25 years, the Canadian Centre for Child Protection has documented a steep and accelerating rise in online harms against children. This trajectory is not coincidental. It reflects a digital environment that is fundamentally misaligned with the developmental realities of childhood.