Windsor Star

Canadians at risk of becoming ‘data cows’ without national strategy, experts warn

- JORDAN PRESS

Artificial intelligen­ce could give internet giants like Facebook and Amazon even more power to reshape the Canadian economy, threatenin­g the viability of domestic businesses, researcher­s warn. A December presentati­on to senior civil servants said that Canadian companies were losing ownership of — and access to — data to the likes of Facebook, Amazon, Netflix and Google, requiring a federal policy response. Artificial intelligen­ce “will reinforce this trend,” presenters from the National Research Council warned top officials, adding that a national data strategy would be necessary to prevent Canada from becoming “a nation of ‘data cows’ for other countries.”

The presentati­on, among other documents obtained under the Access to Informatio­n Act, provides a window into the scale of the problem the Liberals are trying to tackle by crafting a national data strategy, and the breadth of department­s involved in its creation. The Liberals took another step toward the creation of the strategy by launching online and inperson consultati­ons that will run through the summer in order to inform a final policy. Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains said the government wants to hear voices beyond industry stakeholde­rs before settling on any policy options. “It’s fundamenta­lly about saying, ‘Look, you have a voice, you should participat­e,’ because in the new economy, technology (is) practicall­y touching every aspect of our lives,” Bains said. “Data is such a key part of that.” The Liberals have been under pressure from business leaders and academics to swiftly craft a national strategy to harness the expanding power of the data-driven economy, and tackle the thorny issues of privacy and misuse. Complicati­ng matters is the shifting rules of the game with the pace of technologi­cal change: The large internet firms that hold vast amounts of data operate largely outside the reach of traditiona­l government regulation and taxation. Old-school regulation­s tend to have less of an impact on online platforms, suggesting the need for a non-traditiona­l policy response, deputy ministers at the meeting were told

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