
Meta news ban intensifying Canadians' legacy media break
As Canada heads into an election this month, voters looking for campaign news on Facebook or Instagram will find material filtered through online creators and influencers -- and no links to articles from major media outlets.
Facebook is being flooded with deepfake news reports about Mark Carney
A network of scam accounts are running Facebook ads featuring an AI-generated prime minister at a time when all news is blocked on the Meta-owned platform in Canada
How social media news ban is keeping voters in the dark
A media monitoring organization says the “ news blackout” on Facebook and Instagram is blocking crucial updates for voters. CBC Calgary’s Rob Brown reveals new research into how this shift might affect your feed during the election.
Get Fact by Kevin Newman talks with Taylor Owen from McGill’s Centre for Media, Tech & Democracy
A deep dive into how disinformation is evolving—and what it means for Canada’s democracy and elections.
ChatGPT now lets users create fake images of politicians. We stress-tested it
Image generator is supposed to block certain content, but ChatGPT suggested workarounds
WeChat, Carney et la Chine : pas de panique, disent des chercheurs en désinformation
Selon les experts de l’Observatoire de l’écosystème de l’information de l’Université McGill, la diffusion de deux articles au ton informatif sur un compte WeChat lié au Parti communiste chinois ne constitue pas une preuve que Pékin appuie le Parti libéral du Canada.
The story of ‘Canadians for the 51st state and Elon Musk for Governor’: How a thriving buy-and-sell forum turned into Facebook’s largest voice for annexation
The Facebook group now called “Canadians for the 51st state and Elon Musk for Governor” used to be Hamilton’s thriving buy-and-sell community — until it was “hijacked.”
How prepared is Canada for foreign election interference?
While the focus in recent years has been on Russia, China and India, there are fresh concerns about efforts from south of the border.
Should Canadians worry about foreign interference in the federal election?
Social media makes spread of disinformation easy and risk of foreign influence high, making fact-checking important during federal election
U.S. now world’s leading disinformation factory
Canada needs a new approach to detect, expose and neutralize disinformation in both the short- and long-term, say leading experts.
Is climate change still an election issue for Montrealers?
In the shadow of U.S. tariffs, reviving pipeline projects has been up for discussion in this federal election campaign, even in Quebec, where opposition has been strong in the past. So how did Montreal go from the city where half a million people marched for climate action, to a place where the environment seems barely on the ballot?
3 sneaky ways you could be influenced this election
With little regulation and a massive active audience, social media is a hotbed for information manipulation during an election. CBC’s Farah Nasser goes to the Media Ecosystem Observatory to find out what to watch for in your feed in the weeks ahead.
The changing face of election interference
We’re a few weeks into a federal election that is currently too close to call. And while most Canadians are wondering who our next Prime Minister will be, my guests today are preoccupied with a different question: will this election be free and fair?
Can you tell online fact from fiction in this election?
As the election campaign ramps up, what kind of misinformation and disinformation is spreading online? We talk to Aengus Bridgman, one of Canada’s leading experts on misinformation.
How the next government can protect Canada’s information ecosystem
Taylor Owen is the Beaverbrook Chair in Media, Ethics, and Communication at McGill University and the host of The Globe and Mail’s Machines Like Us podcast. Helen A. Hayes is a PhD candidate at McGill University, and a senior fellow at the Centre for Media, Technology and Democracy.
Élection 2025 : Comprendre les risques de désinformation
Rattrapage du vendredi 4 avril 2025
Carney pledges new CBC mandate, $150M funding boost
Liberal Leader Mark Carney is pledging an initial funding boost of $150 million for CBC/Radio-Canada as part of a new mandate to expand local news and emergency coverage. Carney also pledged to make future funding subject to approval from Parliament and not just the government’s cabinet
CIHO Charlevoix: Entrevue avec Mathieu Lavigne
Entrevue avec Mathieu Lavigne, chercheur affilié à l’observatoire de l’écosystème médiatique à McGill sur la désinformation en ligne
Social media platforms’ election-integrity initiatives lack transparency, says researcher
Letters from four social-media companies to Elections Canada outline their platforms’ content and political advertising policies and in some cases also defend their approaches. The platforms are also partnering with Elections Canada to provide voting information to Canadians – a move researchers called positive.
Canada Proud is dominating Facebook ahead of the election
Conservative advocacy group Canada Proud is dominating the discussion of the federal election on Facebook and Instagram as the Meta-owned platforms continue to block the sharing of all news content in Canada.