A thought-provoking series exploring “societal quiet cracking” as a widespread phenomenon beyond the workplace, born of collective trauma, division, and healing in a fractured world.
by Wendy S Huffman & WBN News Global & WBN USA Edition & WBN News Nashville
Starbucks closes several Vancouver stores amid a $1B restructuring focused on better store experiences and profitability, causing surprise among staff and customers.
by 1. Karalee Greer & WBN News Vancouver & WBN News Kitsilano
Our Feature Today is the Astro Weather for the Week Ahead: Oct 11-17. You will be prepared for any cosmic excitement in the next week!
by Leah Powers & WBN News Canada & WBN News Global & WBN News Langley
AI developers often treat data as clay—but every data point is a person. Misusing it invites lawsuits, regulations, and backlash. GDPR and the EU AI Act now reach beyond borders, protecting individuals and penalizing exploitative companies, even those outside Europe.
by Gianni Dell'Aiuto & WBN News Global & WBN USA Edition & WBN News Nashville
AI can be your best worker—or your biggest risk. When GenAI models hold sensitive data, a wrong prompt or bad actor can expose everything. The threat isn’t just technical, it’s legal. Here's how AI insiders may already be leaking your secrets.
by Gianni Dell'Aiuto & WBN News Global & WBN USA Edition & WBN News Nashville
Economists argue that AI hasn’t yet caused widespread job loss, emphasizing transformation, not destruction, in the evolving labor market.
by Debbie Balfour & WBN Ai & WBN News Langley & WBN News Abbotsford & WBN News Okanagan
FIGHTER JETS FOR TRADE RELIEF? The strategy behind Canada's biggest negotiation play: Prime Minister Carney's recent Washington trip wasn't just a courtesy call—it was a strategic opening move on the North American trade chessboard.
by Rob Arthurs & WBN News Tariffs Edition & WBN News Canada & WBN News Global & WBN Finance
Go with the flow today, yes, even if your calendar looks like a mess of commitments and important meetings! Around 1:00 a.m., the Moon slides in with a wink and a sense of humor, giving your morning a curious, mischievous edge.
by Leah Powers & WBN News Canada & WBN News Global
A thought-provoking series exploring “societal quiet cracking” as a widespread phenomenon beyond the workplace, born of collective trauma, division, and healing in a fractured world.
by Wendy S Huffman & WBN News Global & WBN USA Edition & WBN News Nashville
Global business confidence is being reset by AI funding risk, energy volatility, extreme heat, and slower trade momentum. Investors are no longer only asking what can grow—they are asking what can be funded, insured, shipped, cooled, and protected.
AI demand is now moving from a growth story to cost pressure. Markets are reacting as chip shortages, IPO uncertainty, energy risk, extreme heat, and trade policy all hit business planning simultaneously.
Peachy Magistrado joins Vancouver City News, sharing practical insight on home health care, senior wellness, caregiving, and healthy aging.
Extreme weather, infrastructure stress, AI competition, central bank uncertainty, and capital flows are shaping today’s global business outlook. The strongest signal is no longer only markets. It is the rising pressure on systems that businesses depend on.
A U.S. Senate vote regarding Iran, the release of Federal Reserve bank stress tests, continued weakness in technology shares, and growing questions surrounding artificial intelligence investment are creating a more complex environment for businesses and investors worldwide.
Expect a few verbal curveballs today, folks. This is not the market for snap decisions or “sounds good to me” agreements. Slow down, read the fine print, and actually listen to what people are saying, not what you hope they’re saying. Commit carefully.
Excerpt: From Bannockburn and Carabobo to the United Nations Charter and Hong Kong’s handover, June 21–28 shaped world history.
A social media exchange about creativity, employment, and artificial intelligence highlights growing concerns among artists and creative professionals. The discussion may be an early signal of a broader debate about how technology will reshape creative work in the coming decade.
A thought-provoking series exploring “societal quiet cracking” as a widespread phenomenon beyond the workplace, born of collective trauma, division, and healing in a fractured world.
by Wendy S Huffman & WBN News Global & WBN USA Edition & WBN News Nashville
Starbucks closes several Vancouver stores amid a $1B restructuring focused on better store experiences and profitability, causing surprise among staff and customers.
by 1. Karalee Greer & WBN News Vancouver & WBN News Kitsilano
Our Feature Today is the Astro Weather for the Week Ahead: Oct 11-17. You will be prepared for any cosmic excitement in the next week!
by Leah Powers & WBN News Canada & WBN News Global & WBN News Langley
AI developers often treat data as clay—but every data point is a person. Misusing it invites lawsuits, regulations, and backlash. GDPR and the EU AI Act now reach beyond borders, protecting individuals and penalizing exploitative companies, even those outside Europe.
by Gianni Dell'Aiuto & WBN News Global & WBN USA Edition & WBN News Nashville
AI can be your best worker—or your biggest risk. When GenAI models hold sensitive data, a wrong prompt or bad actor can expose everything. The threat isn’t just technical, it’s legal. Here's how AI insiders may already be leaking your secrets.
by Gianni Dell'Aiuto & WBN News Global & WBN USA Edition & WBN News Nashville
Economists argue that AI hasn’t yet caused widespread job loss, emphasizing transformation, not destruction, in the evolving labor market.
by Debbie Balfour & WBN Ai & WBN News Langley & WBN News Abbotsford & WBN News Okanagan
FIGHTER JETS FOR TRADE RELIEF? The strategy behind Canada's biggest negotiation play: Prime Minister Carney's recent Washington trip wasn't just a courtesy call—it was a strategic opening move on the North American trade chessboard.
by Rob Arthurs & WBN News Tariffs Edition & WBN News Canada & WBN News Global & WBN Finance
Go with the flow today, yes, even if your calendar looks like a mess of commitments and important meetings! Around 1:00 a.m., the Moon slides in with a wink and a sense of humor, giving your morning a curious, mischievous edge.
by Leah Powers & WBN News Canada & WBN News Global