Business
No passengers hurt after planes collide on YVR tarmac
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Two Air Canada planes collided on the tarmac at Vancouver International Airport on Sunday.
The incident happened while an Air Canada Rouge Airbus A319 was being pushed back from the gate at around 2 p.m.
According to Air Canada, the Airbus’s wingtip “made contact” with a Jazz Air Canada Express Q400 plane that was parked at a nearby gate.
No one was injured, Air Canada said, and the passengers were re-booked onto other flights later on Sunday.
One passenger told CBC that she could see a piece of her plane’s wing on the ground and, after the planes were moved, she saw a piece of the Q400’s wing fall to the ground.
This Labour Day long weekend is one of the busiest of the year at YVR, with around 316,000 travellers expected to pass through its doors.
The Richmond News has reached out to YVR for more details.





Business
Metrolinx Eglinton Crosstown opening date delayed – CTV News Toronto
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Canada's population added 1.15 million people since last year: StatsCan – CBC News
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Business
Ottawa rolls out voluntary code of conduct for AI
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The federal government is unfurling a voluntary code of conduct for generative AI as anxiety persists over its proliferation and pace of development.
Innovation Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne announced the code on Wednesday at the All In artificial intelligence conference in Montreal, where Canadian technology companies including OpenText and Cohere pledged to sign on.
The document lays out measures organizations can take when working in generative AI — the algorithmic engine behind chatbots such as ChatGPT, which can spit out anything from term papers to psychotherapy.
The government says the measures align with six key principles that include equity, transparency and human oversight.
Amid both excitement and angst over the seemingly boundless scale of AI advancement, the federal government in June tabled a bill outlining a general approach to AI guardrails and leaves details to a later date, saying it will come into force no sooner than 2025.
Artificial intelligence pioneer Yoshua Bengio, who has stated the legislation puts Canada on the right path even as progress remains too slow, says public fear still hangs over the sector and that more investment toward safety and standards is essential.
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