The Canadian Centre for Child Protection is marking 20 years of a once small pilot project to report online sexual abuse and exploitation of children.
The Canadian Centre for Child Protection is marking 20 years of a once small pilot project to report online sexual abuse and exploitation of children.
WINNIPEG — More Manitoba communities will be connected to fibre broadband internet service this fall.
Lawmakers and cross-border business advocates in the United States want Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government to go back to the future in order to ease travel delays between the U.S. and Canada.
OTTAWA — The glitch-prone app touted as an efficient border tool early in the pandemic has become a punching bag for critics who question its utility — but ArriveCan may be here to stay.
OTTAWA — A former senior intelligence officer with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service says it has surveilled politicians at the federal, provincial and municipal levels because of concerns they’re being paid by foreign governments.
OTTAWA — A parliamentary committee will begin exploring the RCMP’s use of spyware today, diving deeper into an issue that’s sounded alarms for privacy and civil liberties groups across the country.
The Winnipeg-based Canadian Centre for Child Protection (C3P) says young boys are being “aggressively” targeted on social media in acts of sextortion.
WINNIPEG — New provincial funding will assist Winnipeg police in tackling the rise in cybercrime.
WINNIPEG — New statistics show that police-reported extortion cases in Canada rose by nearly 300 per cent in the last decade, as the crime swelled online during the COVID-19 pandemic.
OTTAWA — Telecommunications experts called for scuttling the planned Rogers Communications takeover of rival Shaw, slamming the response of Ottawa and the federal telecom regulator to the serious Rogers outage earlier this month.
Xplore Mobile, which provides wireless service to customers in Manitoba, will cease operations on Aug. 31, according to a company statement.
TORONTO — Rogers Communications Inc.’s move to credit its customers with the equivalent of five days of service following the massive outage that crippled its network last week is “wholly inadequate,” a legal expert said.