The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/02/08 at 21:00 EST
Episode Date: February 9, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/02/08 at 21:00 EST...
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From CBC News, The World is Sour.
I'm Neil Kumar.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is in Paris,
meeting with world leaders and tech bosses
at a major AI summit.
As Philipp Lee Shanuk reports,
it's all about trying to reap the benefits of AI while
managing the risks.
Set to begin Monday at the Grand Palais in central Paris, organizers of the AI Action
Summit say this is a pivotal moment before society has become too reliant on artificial
intelligence.
Jamal Atif is the Scientific Director of France's nationwide AI priority program. So there are important questions that we should
tackle the future of the workforce of course. The leaders of France, India and
Canada will brush shoulders with top executives from Alphabet, Microsoft and
OpenAI. They're looking at impacts on employment and sovereignty but also
potential AI positives
such as climate change solutions and new treatments for diseases. The AI Summit is hoping participants
will sign a non-binding communique of principles on the stewardship of AI, but there will be
other opportunities. AI will be on Canada's agenda at the G7 meeting it's hosting in
Alberta this summer. Philip LeShannok, CBC News, Toronto. Canada is planning to deepen its
economic ties with the European Union in the face of Donald Trump's terror threat.
International Trade Minister Mary Inghe emphasized that message today. She's in
Brussels meeting with the European Union leaders and officials who are also
facing terror threats from the US President. Inghe says the focus of the
meeting is bolstering economic connections beyond the Canada-EU
trade agreement.
Trade agreements are one thing and we have seen really great numbers, but what more can
we be doing to help Canadian businesses enter into any of the 27 member states that's here
in the European Union?
What more can we do to do the same in Canada for European businesses? Ng says if Washington ends up imposing tariffs,
Canada would challenge the Trump administration at the World Trade Organization.
On an Israeli army base,
Orlevy rushes into his brother's arms, hugging him tightly.
He was one of three Israeli men released after almost 500 days in Hamas captivity.
Unlike hostage's release earlier, the three looked gaunt, pale and weak.
Their release was the latest under the Gaza ceasefire agreement and was accompanied by
the release of 183 Palestinian prisoners and detainees.
In Gaza, the released Palestinians were welcomed by hugs from friends and family.
Negotiations on a second phase of the deal began this week.
There are hopes that the agreement would see more hostage for prisoner exchanges and the
withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza.
The three Baltic states have pulled the plug on the Russian power grid.
Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia say it's part of their plan to integrate more closely with the European Union and
boost their own security. Dominic Velaitis has more. Latvia, Lithuania and
Estonia disconnected from Russia's power grid this morning, severing their link to
the network of their former Soviet Imperial overlord. Shortly after, Latvian
workers climbed towers 100 metres
from the Russian border and cut the power cables. A highly symbolic act.
Tomorrow, the three Baltic nations will connect to the European Union's power network.
It's a historical moment.
Kasper Smelnis is Latvia's energy minister.
It's one step more forward if you talk about our
security, our independence. At this moment we are fully independent and we're fully responsible for
what's happening in our systems. The Baltic nations have been planning to decouple from the
Russian grid for years. Moscow's annexation of Crimea in 2014 saw those plans gain momentum.
Dominic Vlaitis for CBC News, Riga Latvia.
Sony's PlayStation Network is experiencing a major outage across the world.
Tens of thousands of gamers are unable to access online services, stores and multimedia
apps.
An outage tracker says users started to report issues with PSN late Friday.
And that is your World is Sour. For CBC News, I'm Neal Kumar.