The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/03/07 at 09:00 EST
Episode Date: March 7, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/03/07 at 09:00 EST...
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From CBC News, it's the world this hour. I'm Joe Cummings.
The latest jobs report is suggesting Canadian businesses may be slowing their hiring plans
in the face of the U.S. tariff crisis.
Statistics Canada says 1,100 new jobs were added to the economy last month, which is
well short of the 20,000 that many analysts had been predicting.
As a result, the unemployment rate remains at 6.6 percent.
That's where it was in January.
As well, major snowstorms in eastern and central Canada last month meant more than 400,000
Canadians lost work hours.
Meanwhile, in the midst of the Trump administration's on-again, off-again tariff action, senior
Canadian officials continue
to speak out on the American news networks.
Here's Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc last night on CNN.
I don't presume to imagine what the president or his administration have as their ultimate
objectives.
They made this decision, which we think is unfair and unwise.
Canada's never going to be the 51st state.
Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Jolie was also on CNN saying she believes the president's
ultimate goal is to weaken Canada's economy, clearing the way for annexation. Jolie odds
it's important that both Canadians and the world know exactly what Trump is doing. And
then there's the impact on business, both here in Canada and the United States.
You know, you can't make an investment decision if you don't know what the tax regime is.
You don't know what the tariff regime is.
On CNBC, that is Bob Ray, Canada's ambassador to the UN.
As it stands this morning, Trump has paused some new tariffs on Canada and Mexico and
has reduced potash levies to 10 percent.
But still on the books are the tariffs Trump plans to bring in next week on Canadian steel
and Canadian aluminum.
After a week of talks, the European Union has now agreed to significantly increase its
military spending to ensure Europe's long-term security.
And at the close of an emergency summit, the EU also voiced near unanimous support for
Ukrainian sovereignty.
Anna Cunningham reports.
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York Times, The New York Times, The New York Times, The New York Times, The New York Times, The New York Times, The New Brussels close to midnight. Today history is being written. 27 EU leaders and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky
concluding a 10-hour meeting.
We are coming out of this European Council very determined
to ensure Europe's security and to act with the scale,
the speed and the resolve that this situation demands.
A week on from the White House bust-up between
President Zelensky, Donald Trump and Vice
President JD Vance, Europe has rallied behind Ukraine.
With one predictable exception, the Kremlin-friendly Prime Minister of Hungary, Viktor Orban, failing
to endorse the EU statement.
Anna Cunningham, CBC News, London.
Now to a concerning story about child privacy and protection.
A marketplace investigation has found popular game apps that are actively profiling and
tracking children.
Christine Birak has the details.
Sliding his finger across the screen, 9-year-old Jamie's busy playing a mobile game.
Based on its app store rating, Mom Sarah Dermody assumed kids' privacy laws would apply,
but we show her the game's fine print.
It says games are not meant to be used if you are under 16.
Wow.
The age and the content rating doesn't always match the privacy policy.
Posing as game developers, we approached four global data sellers
to test whether their data included information on kids.
None of our data will have anyone under 16.
One gives us location data for over half a million devices in Toronto.
Hundreds are at elementary schools, intentional or not.
We're able to confirm a specific child's walk to school, sometimes a convenience store,
and back home for a month.
It is a bit scary.
After checking privacy settings and tracking on Jamie's devices, Sarah Dermody says she's not downloading any
new apps without reading their privacy policy first.
Christine Birak, CBC News, Toronto. You can catch the full investigation tonight
on CBC TV or CBC Gem. And that is the World This Hour. For CBC News, I'm Joe Cummings.