Facebook watching: Nine hours in the world of Facebook LiveDespite the headlines, Facebook Live is mostly banal. So what does the social network want with all our boring videos?
The war between autonomous cars and pedestriansHow driverless cars could spark an urban coup that makes pedestrians and bikes the kings of the road once again
The case for pressing pause on Facebook LiveThe ethical problems Facebook is now confronting with its live video streaming service should have been addressed before it ever launched
Should Facebook tell you more about political ads?A new group from the U.K. is pushing for transparency in online political advertising. Why it matters to Canada, too
The ethics of putting eye scanners in nursing homesAs eye scanners come to nursing homes, they raise questions about how we’ll use technology to contend with an aging population
Until A.I. replaces us, we all work for FacebookThe social media giant may be hiring thousands of people to respond to objectionable content, but its users are still its first line of defence
Garry Kasparov on Russia, chess, and the great gambit of AIAs a chess legend, Garry Kasparov always looks several moves ahead—and his new book envisions what the future will hold
Why your house is about to get a lot more talkativeArtificially intelligent voice assistants like the Amazon Echo and Google Assistant are poised to change how we interact with our homes
Can Facebook’s misinformation problem be fixed?Facebook admits it responded to ’information operations’ during the 2016 election. Will the site ever rid itself of distorted information?
Canada’s science minister speaks out on women in STEMKirsty Duncan is considering quotas to ensure women land top research posts. Is the Trudeau government on board?