King Charles III is set to be crowned alongside the Queen Consort at a lavish ceremony in Westminster Abbey on Saturday, May 6. The investiture will form part of a long weekend filled with celebrations for the new monarch, ranging from street parties to concerts. The King ascended the throne after the death of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, in September last year, making him the oldest new monarch in British history. (The Telegraph)

Classified as: McGill experts, Peter McNally, Brian Cowan, Department of History and Classical Studies, School of Information Studies, McGill History Project, coronation, King Charles III
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Published on: 2 May 2023

Ottawa announced it is banning TikTok from all government-issued mobile devices in response to privacy and security concerns. The federal government said it will also block the Chinese-owned social media app from being downloaded on official devices in the future. The new rule follows the app’s intense scrutiny in the United States and also concerns of covert Chinese influence on Canadian affairs. (Globe and Mail

Classified as: School of Information Studies, Benjamin Fung, Cybersecurity
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Published on: 1 Mar 2023

Queen Elizabeth, Canada's head of state and the longest-reigning British monarch, has died. Elizabeth became Queen in 1952, at the relatively tender age of 25, and presided over the country and the Commonwealth, including Canada, for seven decades. Those 70 years as monarch were recognized during this year's Platinum Jubilee events, which reached their height in London in early June. (CBC News)

Here are some experts from McGill University that can provide comment on this issue:

Classified as: McGill experts, Peter McNally, School of Information Studies, McGill History Project, monarchy, British monarchy, Queen Elizabeth, Queen Elizabeth II, Daniel Béland, McGill Institute for the Study of Canada (MISC), department of political science, Benjamin Woodfinden, Brian Cowan, Department of History and Classical Studies
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Published on: 8 Sep 2022

The federal government quietly tested facial recognition technology on millions of unsuspecting travellers at Toronto’s Pearson International Airport in 2016. The six-month initiative, meant to pick out people the Canada Border Services Agency suspected might try to enter the country using fake identification, is detailed in a document obtained by The Globe and Mail through a freedom of information request. The project is the largest known government deployment of the technology in Canada to date.

Classified as: McGill experts, privacy, facial recognition, facial recognition software, facial recognition technology, security, Ignacio Cofone, Faculty of Law, Benjamin Fung, School of Information Studies, Sonja Solomun, max bell school of public policy, Centre for Media Technology and Democracy
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Published on: 22 Jul 2021

Two websites claiming to be the pages for newspapers located in Quebec are the latest in a series of fake sites.  The sites have extensive mastheads with staff titles, pictures and names.  Stories posted on this site are translations or rewrites of original stories posted by other media outlets.  These sites are earning revenue with little effort through Google AdSense.  CBC

Classified as: Fake news sites, Ignacio Cofone, Kimiz Dalkir, fake news, Data Privacy, School of Information Studies
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Published on: 30 Jul 2019
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