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Datametrex AI Ltd V.DM

Alternate Symbol(s):  DTMXF

Datametrex AI Limited is a technology-focused company with exposure to artificial intelligence, healthcare, and mobile gaming. It is focused on collecting, analyzing and presenting structured and unstructured data using machine learning and artificial intelligence. The Company's products include AnalyticsGPT, Cyber Security, and Healthcare. AnalyticsGPT platform scans vast data streams from social media, news, blogs, forums, messengers, enterprise data, and the dark Web, creating predictive analytics. Cyber Security is a deep analytics platform that captures, structures, and visualizes vast amounts of unstructured social media data, which is used as a discovery tool that allows organizations to make decisions. It offers Nexa Products, which consists of NexaSecurity and NexaSMART. Healthcare consists of Imagine Health Centres, a multidisciplinary healthcare facility, and Medi-Call, a telehealth platform. The Company also offers a mobile blockchain game, Cereal Crunch.


TSXV:DM - Post by User

Post by Oden6570on May 13, 2022 5:09am
202 Views
Post# 34680468

Conspiracy theories are hurting democracy.

Conspiracy theories are hurting democracy.

Conspiracy theories are hurting democracy. What can we do?

Ugly incidents show the dangers of disinformation

TWITTER
Protesters shouted “traitor” at NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, second from left with pink turban, on George Street in downtown Peterborough on Tuesday.

As Jagmeet Singh left a campaign office in Peterborough on Tuesday, confronted by a mob hurling death threats and expletive-laced insults, the NDP leader felt he was experiencing the effects of a disease that increasingly afflicts our democracy.

“Polarization and disinformation,” Singh said, were at the root of the aggression of a crowd that included Neil Sheard, an anti-lockdown activist who was one of the organizers behind Ottawa’s “Rolling Thunder” demonstration.

Just two days earlier, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau had his own confrontation with disinformation. A 2016 photo of Trudeau, his son Xavier, and then international trade minister Chrystia Freeland was widely shared online as an image of the prime minister taking his son to a U2 concert during his recent surprise trip to Kyiv (they didn't attend the concert).

Conservative leadership hopefuls weren’t spared either. As they took to a debate stage in Edmonton on Wednesday night, live chats on YouTube bubbled over with baseless conspiracy theories about which candidates were allegedly agents linked to the World Economic Forum.

The incidents illustrate a wider scourge of misleading content plaguing Canada, the consequences of which will be increasingly farreaching, experts say.

Marcus Kolga, a disinformation expert with the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, has observed how Russian state media has amplified anti-vaccination narratives and

conspiracies in Canada, which coalesced into convoy movements across the country. In turn, he’s seen Canadian anti-lockdown groups seizing on and spreading Russian disinformation about Ukraine. These “existential threats,” Kolga says, will lead to an increase in radical narratives that could incite more protests like the Ottawa convoy and Capitol riot in the United States.

“If we don’t take care of this problem right now, and if we don’t address it, it’s going to eventually undermine our democracy,” he said.

But Canada is still charting how it plans to rein in the onslaught of false information, even as other countries have recently made moves to address it head on.

In late April, the European Union approved landmark legislation that would protect internet users from disinformation, hate speech and other harmful content, and compel big-tech companies to remove flagged posts from their platforms or face steep fines.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security also recently struck a “disinformation governance board” to counter false information flowing from foreign states.

Other countries have tackled the issue in a number of ways, some of which have been viewed as legitimate attempts to weed out deliberately misleading content, while others have been criticized as politically motivated attempts to curtail free speech.

It’s an issue Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez could potentially address through legislation aimed at regulating big tech. For now, his department has taken steps like funding organizations that help Canadians protect themselves from disinformation online.

It’s also something Foreign Affairs Minister Mlanie Joly and other ministers say they are monitoring at the international level, removing Russian state media from Canadian airwaves and funding G7 initiatives aimed at targeting foreign interference.

But determining what is deemed harmful and misleading content, and how far governments should go to block it, means legislating disinformation in Canada is something of a “nuclear option,” Kolga said.

“If we’re talking about forcing social media to take down specific content that’s posted by Canadians … you’re going to run up against a lot of political resistance from people on the right who are ardent defenders of free speech,” he said.

Indeed, Ottawa’s online harms consultation — which was focused on harmful online content like hate speech and the sexual exploitation of children rather than disinformation — sparked criticism that future legislation would chill free speech.

Heritage Canada has now convened a panel of experts to help establish a legislative and regulatory framework ahead of introducing such a law, but this time, disinformation is set to be studied in the group’s final session.

Bernie Farber, chair of the Canadian Anti-Hate Network and one of the panel’s members, said he’s “quite glad” the subject is being included among other online harms, but told the Star its potential inclusion might broaden the scope of the legislation too much.

Kolga is of a similar view, saying that while disinformation overlaps with hate speech, it’s still “several degrees away” from most kinds of online harms.

For NDP heritage critic Peter Julian, Canada’s “rise in disinformation and the rise in hate are in parallel.”

Despite Julian’s belief that the government isn’t meeting the urgency of the moment, he doesn’t think Ottawa should immediately rush to legislate false content.

“I certainly think there are best practices in other jurisdictions that need to be looked at, and the government has the ability to do that now,” Julian said.

In a statement to the Star, Rodriguez said governments around the world are “grappling” with the issue. “We are going to take the time we need to get this right, and work with members of Parliament, across all parties, to tackle disinformation together,” he said.

Alberta Sen. Paula Simons, who said her Senate inbox is sometimes overflowing with so much disinformation she cannot use it, argued Ottawa’s path forward must lie with large online platforms rather than targeting individuals.

“I really worry that when we criminalize speech — even the worst speech, even the very worst of speech — we’re not actually solving the problem, which are the networks that disseminate it,” she said.

Another solution, Kolga said, is for the federal government to work with provinces to improve digital media literacy from childhood onwards, and establishing a permanent task force with social media giants to monitor disinformation.

“Even though these social media giants make their money off clicks on ads that they sell, I also have to believe that they have an interest in ensuring that our democracy’s healthy and also have an interest in helping clean up our information environment,” he said.

‘‘ We are going to … work with members of Parliament, across all parties, to tackle disinformation together.

PABLO RODRIGUEZ HERITAGE MINISTER


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