Your DNA Can Now Be Pulled From Thin Air. Privacy Experts Are Worried.

David Duffy, a wildlife geneticist at the University of Florida, just wanted a better way to track disease in sea turtles. Then he started finding human DNA everywhere he looked.

Over the last decade, wildlife researchers have refined techniques for recovering environmental DNA, or eDNA — trace amounts of genetic material that all living things leave behind. A powerful and inexpensive tool for ecologists, eDNA is all over — floating in the air, or lingering in water, snow, honey and even your cup of tea. Researchers have used the method to detect invasive species before they take over, to track vulnerable or secretive wildlife populations and even to rediscover species thought to be extinct. The eDNA technology is also used in wastewater surveillance systems to monitor Covid and other pathogens.

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Minnesota’s ‘Orwellian’ Bias Registry Will Chill Speech, Could Be Used to Punish Enemies, Critics Say

Writing an article claiming that Covid-19 is a Chinese bioweapon.

Wearing a T-shirt that expresses love for Harry Potter author J. K. Rowling.

Not using someone’s preferred pronouns. Posting a Bible verse online critical of homosexuality.

These are all examples of alleged hate that could soon be compiled by the Minnesota Department of Human Rights and logged in a new database or registry of bias under a proposal that has already been approved by the state’s Democrat-controlled house and senate.

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Jamie Sarkonak: The CRTC is coming for the internet, just as Trudeau intended

Not even two weeks have passed since the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) was given expanded powers over the internet, and it’s already labelling valid points of criticism as “myths.”

It’s a bad sign. If the organization tasked with regulating online content is playing rhetorical games in response to critics in the early days, we can hardly trust it to be honest when it builds its regulatory framework.

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MEPs to vote on proposed ban on ‘Big Brother’ AI facial recognition on streets

Moves to ban live “Big Brother” real time facial recognition technology from being deployed across the streets of the EU or by border officials will be tested in a key vote at the European parliament on Thursday.

The amendment is part of a package of proposals for the world’s first artificial intelligence laws, which could result in firms being fined up to €10m (£8.7m) or removed from trading within the EU for breaches of the rules.

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Digital loonie? Bank of Canada wants your thoughts on potential new currency

The Bank of Canada wants to know what Canadians think about the possibility of a digital loonie.

Consultations on what Canadians would like to have included in a digital currency are open online from May 8 until June 19, the Bank of Canada said Monday.

The central bank notes, however, that the decision to launch a digital version of the Canadian dollar remains in the hands of Parliament and physical coins and banknotes aren’t going anywhere.

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Hamilton police should halt drone program, Ontario-wide investigation needed: former privacy commissioner

Ontario’s former privacy commissioner says the current commissioner should launch a province-wide investigation on how police services are using drones, and programs like the one by Hamilton Police Service (HPS) should shut down until that’s done.

“What Hamilton police is doing with these drones is appalling,” Ann Cavoukian told CBC Hamilton.

“I don’t believe the value of it is greater than the harm it introduces.”

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Bill C-11: Why is YouTube mad at Canada?

A new law that seeks to give Canadian artists a leg up online has left many influencers and tech giants alike seeing red.

They took out subway ads, they posted TikToks, but in the end, the score was Silicon Valley-0, Ottawa-1.

After many twists and turns, and over two-and-a-half years of review, the Canadian government has passed a new law that makes tech giants like YouTube and TikTok support Canadian cultural content.


A pox on both their houses YouTube is Orwellian and Trudeau’s Liberals are Woke Stalinists. 

“Content creators” fear both being included in the government’s planned forced diet of CanCon which will relegate them to a digital Ghetto, and to a lesser extent being excluded as not Canadian “enough” by the CRTC’s annointed “God’s Of All CanCon.” I plan to continue ignoring CanCan as I have always done. Let’s face it with rare exceptions most of it is unpalatable government agenda swill.

I will now reveal an ugly personal truth: Overplay due to CanCon destroyed virtually all pleasure derived from listening to Gordon Lightfoot’s music.

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Peter Menzies: With Bill C-11 Now Law, What to Watch Out for to Fight Online Censorship

As of April 28, everything audio and visual on the internet is under the control of Canada’s broadcasting and telecommunications regulator and its nine political appointees.

It will be their job, as members of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), to make sure anything that meets the definition of “programming” (and I’m thinking that will include Jordan Peterson’s shows) is of “high standard.”

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Jamie Sarkonak: Censorious Liberal attempt to block news article shows why they want to control the internet

Recently released documents show that although the federal government is sparing in its requests to social media companies to take down comments , such requests can be abused to censor news coverage that paints the government in a bad light. This is especially concerning given the Liberals’ attempts to gain more control over the internet.

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Pentagon-Funded Censorship Firm Graphika Began Monitoring Covid “Disinfo” On Dec. 16, 2019 – Two Weeks Before WHO Knew Covid Existed

Graphika, Inc., a small but influential social media monitoring and censorship firm that has received nearly $7 million in grants and contracts from the US Department of Defense (DOD), began tracking online “conspiracy theories” about Covid-19 on December 16, 2019 – just four days after the first patients reported symptoms in Wuhan, China, and two weeks before the World Health Organization (WHO) was even informed about the virus outbreak.

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GUNTER: Canada’s disturbing censorship conversation

This was a bad week for free speech in Canada.

It has become clear that “progressive” opinion is lining up behind censorship of what Canadians can and cannot say on the Internet, including criticism of politicians and bureaucrats.

According to a story on the Ottawa-insider news site, Blacklock’s Reporter, Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault told a podcast affiliated with the Liberal Party that the government believes federal regulators should have the authority to temporarily block or even shut down websites that say hurtful things about politicians and public servants.

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Chat Control: EU Presents Draft Report on Mandatory Surveillance Law

A draft report on the European Commission’s Child Sexual Abuse Regulation (CSAR), also known as Chat Control, has been published Wednesday, April 19th, for the upcoming debate in the EP’s civil liberties parliamentary committee. The document proposes to add “voluntary detection orders” and automated metadata scanning to the already invasive proposal.

“Mandatory indiscriminate searching of private correspondence and data of unsuspected citizens is still in [the proposal],” MEP Patrick Breyer (Greens-EFA), a member of the anti-censorship European Pirate Party, wrote in his assessment of the first draft report.

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Eye in the sky

A car crash in rural Hamilton. A search for a missing elderly woman. The 2021 CFL Grey Cup. A protest during a visit from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

While vastly different events and incidents, they have one thing in common: A drone operated by the Hamilton Police Service (HPS) was buzzing around in the sky above and watching.

The technology is increasingly being employed by police services across Canada, including in Charlottetown, Fredericton, Toronto, Ottawa, Vancouver and Winnipeg.

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