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In the news today: No Air Canada strike or lockout yet, Google AI summaries concerns

In the news today: No Air Canada strike or lockout yet, Google AI summaries concerns

Here is a roundup of stories from The Canadian Press designed to bring you up to speed…
Air Canada, attendants yet to call job action
There's no official word yet whether Air Canada and the union representing some 10,000 of its flight attendants have averted a possible strike or lockout that could begin as soon as Saturday.
The Air Canada component of the Canadian Union of Public Employees will be in position to strike as of 12:01 a.m. ET on Saturday. That means the required 72 hours' notice for any job action could be given at any point.
However, there is so far no indication from either side that notice of strike or a lockout has been served, or that a tentative deal that would avert a work stoppage has been reached.
Air Canada said on Tuesday afternoon it has reached an 'impasse' in negotiations with the union, which on Tuesday said it declined a proposal from the airline to enter a binding arbitration process.
Experts issue warnings about Google's AI summaries
News publishers say the AI-generated summaries that now top many Google search results are cutting into their online traffic — and experts are still flagging concerns about the summaries' accuracy as they warn the internet itself is being reshaped.
When Google rolled out its AI Overview feature last year, its mistakes — including one suggestion to use glue to make pizza toppings stick better — made headlines. One expert warns concerns about the accuracy of the feature's output won't necessarily go away as the technology improves.
'It's one of those very sweeping technological changes that has changed the way we … search, and therefore live our lives, without really much of a big public discussion,' said Jessica Johnson, a senior fellow at McGill University's Centre for Media, Technology and Democracy.
'As a journalist and as a researcher, I have concerns about the accuracy.'
Ex-general calls for medals review for Afghan vets
A former top general who led the military during the Afghanistan conflict is urging Prime Minister Mark Carney's government to revisit the files of soldiers who served there to see if any of their awards should be upgraded to the Victoria Cross.
Rick Hillier said that despite the failure of recent attempts to trigger such an independent review, he thinks the odds are better now that Ottawa is bent on revitalizing the Canadian Armed Forces.
'I am more optimistic right now. I think for the government, this should be a no-brainer,' Hillier, chief of the defence staff from 2005-2008, told The Canadian Press.
Hillier is part of the civil society group Valour in the Presence of the Enemy, which has been pressing Ottawa to consider awarding veterans of the 2001 to 2014 Afghanistan campaign the country's highest military honour.
Roughly 20,000 under evacuation alert in N.L.
Thousands of people in Newfoundland and Labrador's capital and elsewhere in the province are under evacuation alerts as wildfires continue to threaten communities.
About 5,400 residents in two areas of St. John's were told on Tuesday to be ready to leave their homes at a moment's notice.
They joined roughly 15,000 others in parts of the nearby communities of Paradise and Conception Bay South who were placed under evacuation alerts a day earlier.
The wildfire threatening the towns was about 250 metres from the Trans-Canada Highway on Tuesday night.
Extreme heat persists in Atlantic Canada
Extreme heat is expected to ease in many parts of Canada today, while the Atlantic provinces continue to bear the brunt of a multi-day heat wave.
Relief is expected in southern and eastern Ontario, but Environment Canada says temperatures are still above average for this time of year, with forecasted highs in the low 30s.
The national weather agency says conditions will begin to improve today in many parts of Quebec, with more seasonal daytime highs and lower humidity expected by Thursday.
Meanwhile, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island will continue to see daytime highs reaching the mid to high 30s, with humidity making it feel closer to 40.
Ontario just shy of LTC direct care target
Ontario failed to meet its legislated target for getting long-term care residents an average of four hours a day of direct care by March of this year, the government concedes, though it came quite close.
The Progressive Conservative government set the target aimed at boosting both the amount of direct care residents receive from nurses and personal support workers, as well as other health professionals such as physiotherapists, in a 2021 law.
While the government met its interim targets in the following two years, starting at three hours of direct care, it did not reach the third-year or final targets, amid staffing challenges.
In the last year, the average direct hours of nursing and PSW care in long-term care homes across the province was three hours and 49 minutes, or 95.5 per cent of that four-hour target, according to a report recently published by the Ministry of Long-Term Care, led by Minister Natalia Kusendova-Bashta.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 12, 2025
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Concerns rise in Winnipeg as Air Canada labour dispute could see flights grounded
Concerns rise in Winnipeg as Air Canada labour dispute could see flights grounded

CBC

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  • CBC

Concerns rise in Winnipeg as Air Canada labour dispute could see flights grounded

Social Sharing Flight attendants with Air Canada could go on strike as early as this weekend, and that has some travellers in Winnipeg anxious about what that could mean for their travel plans. Newfoundland resident Paula Drover, who travels back and forth between the East Coast and Winnipeg every two weeks for her job, was boarding a plane home at Winnipeg's airport on Wednesday. She said she and many of her co-workers are concerned about whether they will be able to continue to make the trips she says are an integral part of their jobs. "We have to travel," Drover said. "I have to work and I'm needed at work, so I kinda want to get here. "It's going to be work-impacting for sure." Air Canada said on Wednesday it will begin cancelling flights on Thursday ahead of a potential strike that could see more than 10,000 flight attendants walk off the job this weekend. The Canadian Union of Public Employees gave the carrier a requisite 72-hour strike notice overnight after the two sides reached an impasse in negotiations on Tuesday. Should they walk off the job, the country's largest airline says there would be a gradual suspension of flights, before a complete cessation of flying by Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge by the weekend. About 130,000 customers a day could be affected by a disruption, according to Air Canada. Despite her concerns however, Drover says she would support the workers if they do end up on strike. "They deserve fair wages, they work hard," she said. "I fly quite often and they deal with a lot during a flight." Debbie Iwanchuk from Oakbank was travelling from Winnipeg to Scotland on Wednesday for a three-week trip, but said she is now concerned about whether or not she can get back, depending on how long a strike could last. "We've been planning this for six months. I just heard about two weeks ago, so I started to worry about it, and now it looks like it's going to be a strike starting this week," she said. While in Scotland, she said her and her husband will likely be glued to their phones, trying to get the latest updates on the labour dispute before they are scheduled to return. "We'll be checking. I'm sure we'll be able to look through our phones and get the updates on the news and whatever because we have a plan that covers our roaming charges, so we'll be checking." Despite her concerns she said she is in favour of a strike if that's what it takes for flight attendants to get the agreement they are looking for. "I'm all for them getting what they want, upgraded wages and benefits," Iwanchuk said. "They deserve it." CUPE representatives said in response to their strike action, Air Canada issued a notice of lockout to start at 1:30 a.m. ET on Saturday. Air Canada confirmed the lockout on Wednesday.

We broke the story. AI is breaking the internet.
We broke the story. AI is breaking the internet.

Winnipeg Free Press

time6 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

We broke the story. AI is breaking the internet.

In the summer of 2019, Free Press investigative reporter Ryan Thorpe went undercover for a meeting with a local recruiter for a neo-Nazi group at a secluded park in St. Boniface. The man he met while infiltrating a white nationalist hate group turned out to be a Canadian Armed Forces reservist from Beausejour by the name of Patrik Mathews. In short order, Thorpe would uncover a story that would ultimately lead to a Maryland courtroom where Mathews would be sentenced to nine years in prison for what the FBI said was a plan to incite a race war in the United States. But five years later, all the work Thorpe did as part of our Homegrown Hate investigation is no longer part of the record as it's now defined by the 'intelligence' of Google's Gemini artificial intelligence search platform. Instead, this new approach to search for information delivers a summary — minus any links, sources or reason to look any further than the answer Google has just provided — when you type 'Patrik Mathews' into that search window: Patrik Mathews' biography, as summarized by a Google Gemini query. Take note how that summary makes no mention of the Free Press as the source of the investigation or Thorpe as the journalist – including the fact he had to contend with death threats as the FBI learned members of The Base were planning to kill him for exposing Mathews. In this AI-powered future of search, there is no reward for being the originating source: no links for readers to click to read more, and therefore no revenue to pay for that journalism – not even any recognition. Instead, what greets you is the 'answer' by way of an AI overview. That might be good for tech titans like Google who want to keep users looking at their pages. But it's yet another gut punch to content creators like the Free Press who rely on search engines to send readers our way. 'Large language models (LLMS) are harming publishers in two ways,' notes Paul Deegan, president of News Media Canada. 'First, AI companies are flagrantly scraping and summarizing content directly from published news articles via retrieval-augmented generation. Second, because AI overviews are significantly more comprehensive than the snippets associated with traditional links, users may feel they have no reason to click through to the source article on a publisher's website. 'With the user staying within Big Tech's increasingly tall-walled garden, rather than being directed electronically to news websites via links, publishers are deprived of audience, and their ability to sell advertising and subscriptions is significantly diminished. 'No clicks mean no cash for news businesses. Yet, AI companies are selling ads against copyrighted (and often paywalled) content as well as subscriptions for their premium products.' The harm to publishers' bottom lines isn't the worst of the problem with AI summaries. Accuracy is also a problem: a report by BBC earlier this year examining AI chatbots by Google, Microsoft, OpenAI and Perplexity found 'significant inaccuracies' in more than half of their summaries of news stories. That's a study of news-article summaries; you might also have read funny stories about AI search results suggesting people eat a rock every day or put glue on their pizza, or less hilarious stories about it suggesting a mix of vinegar and bleach for home cleaning (a recipe for poisonous chlorine gas). This happens because AI generates text by making plausible predictions based on training data; nobody is checking for truth in its sources or its answers. The scale and scope of AI's errors and distortions is not known — not to audiences and media companies, not to regulators, lawmakers, academics or even the companies responsible for the AI chatbots. And as AI summaries and chats become more integrated into search systems, people rely on them more, so they're less likely to bother to double-check the information AI tells them. The journalism Ryan Thorpe produced for that special investigation — like all the journalism our newsroom publishes every single day — costs money to produce. Not just to pay investigative journalists, but to pay others in the newsroom to verify our work is accurate and objective, and to host the information on websites and apps for audiences to read it… if they can find it. If generative AI continues to crawl 'without consent, credit and compensation,' what does that mean for the long-term future of information we can trust — and for that matter, for human intelligence?

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