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The AI North Brief

Author: Paul Karwatsky

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15 Minutes. Every Weekday Morning. The AI Intelligence You Need.


Artificial Intelligence is evolving faster than our capability to understand its eventual impact. The AI North Brief is your daily filter, cutting through the noise to deliver only the essential news and policy shifts shaping Canada and the world.


Hosted by veteran news anchor and communications expert Paul Karwatsky, the show bridges the gap between the anchor desk and the cutting edge of AI governance. Currently pursuing his MS in AI Policy, Ethics, and Management at Purdue University, Paul brings a unique lens to the daily brief—combining decades of journalistic rigor with a deep, academic dive into the ethical frameworks and regulatory hurdles that will define the next decade.


Stay informed. Stay ahead. Subscribe to the AI North Brief today.

25 Episodes
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Send a text Description The family of a 12-year-old shot three times at Tumbler Ridge Secondary is suing OpenAI. The lawsuit alleges approximately 12 employees flagged the shooter's ChatGPT interactions as an imminent risk and recommended calling police. Leadership rebuffed them. The same day the lawsuit landed, security researcher Bruce Schneier argued in the Globe and Mail that Canada should stop funneling its $2 billion AI strategy to American tech companies and build public AI instead. Hi...
Send a text Description A Rogers contractor spent months training the AI tool his company introduced. Then he was laid off with a thousand others. In Montreal, a think tank used AI to write a policy paper. It passed peer review, beating human submissions. And in Ottawa, AI Minister Evan Solomon secured new commitments from OpenAI on Canadian oversight following the Tumbler Ridge shooting. Three stories from the past 24 hours, each sitting at a different point on the same curve. Sources Canadi...
Send a text Description One week after the Pentagon blacklisted Anthropic, they're back negotiating. The sticking point: seven words about bulk data surveillance. Meanwhile, Claude continues selecting strike targets in Iran. And a question no one has answered: did Claude generate the coordinates for the school strike that killed 165 girls? The war enters day six. Carney says Canada can't rule out joining. Tags AI North Brief, Anthropic, Pentagon, Dario Amodei, Claude, Iran War, School Bombing...
Red Lines

Red Lines

2026-03-0407:56

Send a text Description Four days into the U.S.-Israel war on Iran and the two leading AI companies are on opposite sides of a question that suddenly feels concrete. Anthropic held its red lines on autonomous weapons and mass surveillance. It got blacklisted. OpenAI rushed in with a deal Sam Altman now calls "opportunistic and sloppy." Claude hit number one in the App Store. 900 workers across Google and OpenAI signed letters demanding limits. The market is choosing Anthropic. The Pentagon is...
Send a text OpenAI's safety team met with federal officials in Ottawa yesterday to explain why it didn't alert Canadian police about a ChatGPT user who described gun violence scenarios eight months before the Tumbler Ridge mass shooting. The company banned the account but determined the activity didn't meet its threshold for reporting to law enforcement. Now Canada is asking whether AI companies should face mandatory reporting requirements, and how to write a law that protects both public saf...
The Reset

The Reset

2026-02-2406:27

Send a text Description Prime Minister Mark Carney visits India this week, the first Canadian leader to do so since relations collapsed in 2023. The ten-day Indo-Pacific tour includes stops in Australia and Japan, with artificial intelligence, clean energy, and critical minerals at the center of discussions. At stake: a $70 billion trade deal with India, the operationalization of the ACITI trilateral tech partnership, and Carney's broader strategy to double Canada's non-U.S. trade within a de...
The Readiness Gap

The Readiness Gap

2026-02-2007:09

Send a text Canadian firms are slower to adopt AI than their global peers. Only about one-quarter have fully implemented AI, compared to one-third globally. But IBM data shows 84% of Canadian executives are confident in 2026 performance and 86% are already using agentic AI. So which is it? This episode examines the disconnect between Canada's research strength and its commercialization struggles, the cultural factors holding companies back, and why the AI adoption gap isn't uniform across the...
Send a text The deadline for Canada's sovereign AI data centre proposals closed on Saturday. For the past month, the federal government accepted pitches for projects over 100 megawatts, Canadian-controlled, designed to reduce dependence on foreign compute. Brookfield estimates hyperscale data centres cost $10 million per megawatt to build, with compute infrastructure adding another $30 million per megawatt. Selected proponents will enter MOUs with the government, though no funding has been al...
Send a text Description Canada and Germany signed an AI cooperation agreement at the Munich Security Conference, launching the Sovereign Technology Alliance. The deal focuses on compute infrastructure, AI research, and talent development. It explicitly names Yoshua Bengio's LawZero as a potential area for collaboration. The signing comes as the Munich conference wrapped with warnings about "wrecking-ball politics" and the fracturing of the rules-based international order. This episode examine...
Technofascism

Technofascism

2026-02-0909:01

Send a text Episode Description A new paper just dropped in AI & Society with a provocative title: "Technofascism: AI, Big Tech, and the New Authoritarianism." Philosopher Mark Coeckelbergh argues that AI isn't politically neutral. The way it's being deployed mirrors features of historical fascism, just through quieter mechanisms: data extraction, algorithmic governance, behavioral nudging, platform monopolization. This episode breaks down the argument, from Hannah Arendt's "thoughtless ...
Send a text Canadian security officials testified this week that AI deepfakes will "very likely" target the next federal election. Their solution? "Hopefully AI will help us detect AI. Hopefully." That's a lot of hope doing a lot of heavy lifting. This episode looks at the global evidence—Slovakia, India, Taiwan, Germany—and a concept called the "liar's dividend" that may be more dangerous than the fakes themselves. Then we project forward to 2028 and ask what happens when leaders who'v...
Send a text Canada is sending an AI delegation to the World Governments Summit in Dubai this week—over 200 companies applied to pitch Canadian AI solutions to 35 heads of state and 6,000 participants. The mission follows an October MOU between Minister Evan Solomon and the UAE, with delegates presenting "responsible, human-centred AI" for government decision-making, health services, and public safety. But new data from IBM suggests the home front isn't as confident. While 86% of Canadian exec...
Send a text Will a company ever voluntarily kill a machine that’s making them money? Ontario recently released joint principles for responsible AI use, including a bold requirement: organizations must be ready to "decommission" any AI system producing unsafe or discriminatory outputs. It sounds good on paper, but in the high-stakes world of corporate efficiency, it ignores a fundamental truth that profitable systems are rarely shut down for harms that are invisible to the naked eye. In this e...
The Microsoft Problem

The Microsoft Problem

2026-01-2909:21

Send a text Episode Description Microsoft beat on every metric and the stock dropped six percent. What the earnings call revealed about AI infrastructure spending, OpenAI concentration risk, and why Canada's sovereign compute push faces a $72 billion scale gap. Chapter Markers / Timecodes 00:00 – Intro 00:25 – The Earnings 01:45 – The Spending Problem 03:30 – The OpenAI Problem 05:00 – What This Means for Canada 06:15 – The Scale Gap 07:00 – Outro Episode Tags Microsoft, Azure, OpenAI, AI ...
Delaware or Bust

Delaware or Bust

2026-01-2905:44

Send a text Y Combinator has quietly removed Canada from its list of countries where it invests. Canadian startups now need to incorporate in the U.S., Cayman Islands, or Singapore to join the world's most prestigious accelerator. YC president Garry Tan confirmed the change, saying Canadian founders should "just convert to Delaware C Corp" if they want to raise money. But on the same day, Toronto-based Waabi announced what it claims is the largest funding round in Canadian tech history: $750 ...
Send a text Episode Description Shopify cuts jobs in its partnerships division as it restructures around "agentic commerce"—AI agents that shop on your behalf. The company launched Agentic Storefronts and co-developed Google's Universal Commerce Protocol with Walmart, Target, and others. Meanwhile, New York-based Forum Ventures is doubling down on Toronto, raising $21.5 million U.S. to build AI startups here despite the broader Canadian VC slump. And Canada and Germany announced a Digital Al...
Send a text At CES 2026, NVIDIA declared "the ChatGPT moment for robotics is here." China installed 295,000 industrial robots last year, 54% of the global total. Its operational stock now exceeds 2 million units, more than the rest of the world combined. Canada? We rank 13th globally. Behind Spain. Behind India. Behind France. This matters because Canada has a productivity crisis. Bank of Canada officials have called it an "emergency" and the country's "Achilles heel." Robotics is one of the ...
Send a text The US just closed a $14 billion forced divestiture of TikTok, requiring American ownership, algorithm retraining, and domestic data storage. Meanwhile, Canada scrapped its TikTok shutdown order and agreed to start the national security review from scratch. Same app, same Chinese parent company, completely opposite outcomes. We break down what Michael Geist calls a government that "caved," why the original Canadian order was security theater, and how the Carney administration's si...
Send a text Prime Minister Mark Carney just returned from Beijing with a landmark trade deal—49,000 Chinese EVs at 6.1% tariffs in exchange for China dropping duties on Canadian canola. One year after calling China the "biggest threat" to Canada, Carney now speaks of a "new strategic partnership" and a "new world order." But this isn't just about cars and canola. As the U.S.-China AI race intensifies, Canada's pivot toward Beijing raises urgent questions about data sovereignty, connected vehi...
Send a text Tax season 2026 brings new AI tools—and new AI scams. The CRA's Charlie chatbot got a $18M generative AI upgrade, but how do you know which AI tools to trust? In 2024, Canadians lost over $638 million to fraud, with AI making scams harder to spot. Voice cloning now takes just 3 seconds of audio. Deepfakes fooled an Ontario man out of $12,000 using fake Trudeau videos. One Hong Kong company lost $25 million to a deepfake video conference. This episode covers: CRA's AI chatbot accur...
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