Thursday, January 25, 2024

 

Colleges Ontario warns of harms from student visa cap

The association representing Ontario colleges is warning of “long-lasting repercussions” from a federal cap on international student visas, and it’s asking for changes to the controversial policy move.

“The federal government’s cap on study permits for international students is essentially a moratorium by stealth that is already causing significant and unnecessary upheaval for students, employers and communities,” Colleges Ontario said in a Thursday statement.

The group that represents 24 Ontario public colleges accused the federal government of rushing its decision without consulting colleges.

“Ontario’s public colleges are calling for the federal government to treat the post-graduate credentials at public colleges the same way it treats the post-graduate credentials at universities and to exempt them from the cap,” the statement said. 

The group added that it has already been working with the province to address some of its concerns.

It asked that the federal government delay requirements for study permit letters of attestation until a provincial process can be enacted.

Under the new policy, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) said each study permit must have a letter of attestation from the province or territory as of Jan. 22, but provinces and territories have until March 31 to create a process for the attestation letters.

The group also requested that the federal immigration minister “engage in a dialogue” about exemptions for students in high-demand programs, along with removing barriers to entry into high-demand programs. 

The IRCC did not immediately respond to a request for comment from BNNBloomberg.ca for a response to the statement from Colleges Ontario.


What is the international student visa cap?

Their calls come days after Immigration Minister Marc Miller announced a two-year cap on international student admissions to Canada. It included a 35-per-cent reduction in new study visas this year, with some provinces like Ontario seeing a reduction of 50 per cent more. 

Miller said this week that he hopes the cap will give governments time to curb a system he said takes advantage of elevated international student tuition, and in some instances, provides poor education. 

He said the federal government will work with provinces that did not take action as fast as he would have liked to address the issue. 

The government will also bar students from accessing postgraduate work permits beginning on Sept. 1 if the school follows a private-public model, Miller said. 

Over the next few weeks, the cap will also see that work permits are only accessible to the spouses of students enrolled in masters programs, doctoral programs and professional programs like medicine and law. 

The policy is also being seen as a response to upward pressure on housing prices coming from record-high numbers of immigrants, including international students, entering the country at a time of limited housing supply. 

Ontario Colleges called the policy an “attack” on the college system.

“Ontario’s public colleges are very concerned about the attacks on a high-performing, efficient public college system – impacting our reputation with potentially long-lasting negative repercussions,” Colleges Ontario said. 

With files from the Canadian Press 




Bank of Canada 'keeping an eye' on student visa cap: Rogers

The Bank of Canada is keeping an eye on the federal cap on international student visas, particularly its potential effects on rental housing inflation.

This week, Ottawa announced a two-year cap on international student visas, which would see the number of new foreign students in the country cut by 35 per cent.

Bank of Canada Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Rogers was asked Wednesday to comment on the policy move as it relates to housing market pressures.

In a Wednesday press conference following the central bank’s latest interest rate decision, Rogers said the bank is not in a position to comment on government policy. But she said they are observing the change and any potential effects it may have on inflation in the housing market, particularly for rental costs.

“What’s happened in the Canadian economy over the last year is we had a particularly big surge in population growth through immigration. It came at a time when there was constrained (housing) supply. You can see this very clearly, most clearly really in the housing sector, in particular in rents,” she told reporters.

“The policies that were announced are on their way to relieving some of that pressure,” she continued.

“We’ll see how they play out, but we will keep an eye on that. It’s definitely one of the things putting pressure on the housing components of inflation.”

Economist warns of consequences

According to the office of Immigration Minister Marc Miller, international education brings $22 billion to the Canadian economy and supports more than 200,000 jobs in Canada.

It’s for that reason that Randall Bartlett, senior director of Canadian economics at Desjardins, warns that any tweak to Canada’s temporary resident numbers, including students, could have harmful effects on the economy.

“There are going to be some consequences when it comes to overall economic activity generated by foreign students coming to Canada, as well as the negative consequences for post-secondary institutions in Canada who have backfilled a lack of financial support from governments with tuitions from foreign students,” he told BNNBloomberg.ca in a phone interview earlier this week.

The move has also ruffled some feathers at the education level.

Philip Landon, interim president and CEO of Universities Canada, said international students amount to as many as 25 per cent of students at some schools and most pay a significant premium to enroll in a Canadian institution, which has some schools worried.

“The potential for a significant financial blow to universities and colleges across the country is definitely there and we’re concerned about that,” he said.

With files from The Canadian Press


Student visa cap will have economic, social consequences: experts


Experts warn that Canada’s new cap on international student visas raises social and economic concerns while having a potentially “marginal” impact on housing prices.

On Monday, the federal government announced a two-year cap on international student admissions that would see new study visas cut by 35 per cent in some provinces.

Canada had more than 1 million international study permit holders as of December. The office of Immigration Minister Marc Miller has said that some institutions are taking advantage of the high tuition rates international students pay, while offering a poor education and exacerbating the country’s housing crunch.

“Through the decisive measures announced today, we are striking the right balance for Canada and ensuring the integrity of our immigration system while setting students up for the success they hope for,” Miller said in a Monday news release on the announcement.


Economic consequences

International education brings $22 billion to the economy and supports more than 200,000 Canadian jobs, according to Miller’s office.

A drop in those dollar figures raises economic concerns for Desjardins economist Randall Bartlett.

Bartlett, senior director of Canadian economics at Desjardins, wrote in a recent report that closing the door to temporary residents, including international students, would deepen the recession and lower Canada’s gross domestic product, while an increase those numbers could help Canada avoid a recession altogether.

“When we look at the measures introduced today, which will significantly reduce the number of foreign students that receive study permits here in Canada, it looks to me like the federal government is making policy on the fly,” Bartlett told BNNBloomberg.ca in Monday phone interview.

“There are going to be some consequences when it comes to overall economic activity generated by foreign students coming to Canada, as well as the negative consequences for post-secondary institutions in Canada who have backfilled a lack of financial support from governments with tuitions from foreign students.”


Economist predicts 'marginal' house price impact

Bartlett believes the move will help cool some of inflation drivers, such as rent prices and consumer goods. But he predicted that housing price relief related to the policy change will be small, as other factors like high interest rates put pressure on the market.

“I think it's going to be pretty marginal in terms of the impact on providing that relief on the cost of housing,” he said.

“Demand isn't the only thing driving up rent prices right now. Interest rates are at the highest level they've been in a couple of decades and inflation back in 2022 was the highest in 40 years, so those high borrowing costs, high input costs, as well as strong demand are leading to higher rents.”


Family impacts

Sarom Rho, an organizer with Migrant Workers Alliance for Change, said the changes unfairly blame international students for Canada’s housing crisis and “cruelly” separate working-class families, as the cap also includes limits on family members of international students.

“It's not right. It's not cool,” she said. “Families deserve to be together. So we're calling on the federal government to reverse this decision.”

Rho made the case that immigration is not to blame when it comes to Canada’s high housing prices, noting that home costs skyrocketed during the pandemic, when immigration was at its lowest.

Statistics Canada data show residential property prices climbed 6.3 per cent in 2020, compared to just 0.7 per cent in 2019. Canada only welcomed 184,500 new permanent residents that year, compared to 341,000 in 2019 and 401,000 in 2021.

“Immigrants and international students are being scapegoated,” Rho said.

“We as people are being told that we should be divided and distracted from who's really responsible and that's the failures of government policy and particularly runaway profiteering. There are a group of people and institutions and corporations in this country who are making a killing off of our shared precarity, and that's not something that any of us want.”

In a statement, a spokesperson for Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada acknowledged the economic growth that international students bring to Canada, but said the government needed to take action on issues “that have made some students vulnerable.” 

“They are not responsible for the shortage of housing, but the growth in the arrival of international students adds significant demand for housing and other services that all Canadians must be able to access,” the statement said.

With files from The Canadian Press Jan. 23,2024


Slowing immigration will reveal dark economic picture: Royce Mendes

Mortgage renewals at elevated rates have already put Canada in a recession, according to a top economist and strategist at Desjardins who says the country’s immigration boom is masking the problem.

Royce Mendes, managing director and head of macro strategy at Desjardins, said Canadians who renewed their mortgages at much higher rates have already cut down their spending to service their debt.

“Canadians who have been renewing mortgages have already been diverting a lot of income and then spending away from businesses in Canada … now towards debt service,” he told BNN Bloomberg in a television interview on Thursday.


Immigration slowdown could reveal economic picture

That slowdown has been hidden from Canada’s economic data, Mendes contended, as a record number of newcomers have arrived in Canada over the past year.

Mendes said he expects population growth from immigration will slow this year due to a shortage of housing and new federal policies aimed at reducing the pace of immigration.

Ottawa has already begun looking at ways to slow immigration, introducing a two-year cap on international students and slowing its immigration targets

Once an immigration slowdown takes hold, Mendes said he expects Canadians will have a truer picture of the economy.

“We won't have that extra boost to (the gross domestic product) and we're going to see the cumulative effects of these mortgage renewals start to show up a lot more clearly in the data,” he said.

“As we move forward, we expect that the economy is going to dip into at least a mild recession this year.”


The case for earlier rate cuts

As the economy darkens, Mendes said he’s observed the Bank of Canada “moving towards a more dovish stance.”

Mendes predicted interest rates will begin to come down in April, which is slightly sooner than some economists’ predictions.

“In my view, if they start a little bit earlier, it gives them the opportunity to be more gradual,” he said.

“I think there are some economists out there who have a later start date for interest rate cuts, but then they might have the Bank of Canada cutting more than 25 basis points at a particular date.”

An earlier rate cut would also offers relief to more Canadians, Mendes argued, because 1.5 per cent of Canadian mortgage holders renew each month, amounting to thousands of people.

“Waiting a few months can mean a big difference for a lot of Canadians,” he said,

“The economy, as I said, is not only facing the challenge for mortgage renewals, (but) population growth, the one driver of economic activity over the past year, is going to be slowing.”

Long-delayed Trans Mountain pipeline to start 

filling with oil


The much-anticipated Trans Mountain pipeline will begin filling with crude in February, marking a key step toward start-up. Canadian heavy crude prices jumped on the news. 

While the process to fill a part of the legacy line will begin in February, the bulk of the 890,000 barrel-a-day line will be filled in March and last about 2-3 weeks, Jason Balasch, senior director of business development at the Canadian government-owned company, said in Houston.  Linefill is typically the first stage of startup and includes moving the first batches of oil from shippers.

Heavy Western Canadian Select’s discount to West Texas Intermediate narrowed to the smallest since August after Balasch’s remarks. 

The start-up of the expansion, which is 98 per cent complete and will triple the pipeline’s capacity, is expected to reshape oil flows across the Americas, spur exports to Asia and likely ramp up production of Canadian oil. Traders are closely watching progress on the pipeline, which is running years behind schedule.

The first tanker to carry Trans Mountain oil is set to load in Vancouver in April, Balasch said. Shippers are expected to provide the preliminary loading dates for the new line by Friday. The final nomination process should be completed by March 15.


Since the Trans Mountain expansion was conceived more than a decade ago, its costs have quadrupled to nearly $31 billion. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government bought the pipeline in 2018 to save the expansion from cancellation amid opposition in British Columbia.

Trans Mountain avoided a possible multi-year delay earlier this month when regulators approved a last-minute application to use smaller pipe in a section of the line where construction challenges emerged. 



AIMCo 'would look at' buying Trans Mountain: 

CEO

The delayed Trans Mountain pipeline is set to begin filling with Canadian crude next month, and the CEO of one of Canada’s largest investment funds says he would consider purchasing the pipeline when the federal government decides to sell it.

“We have an active file on Trans Mountain,” Evan Siddall, CEO of the Alberta Investment Management Corporation (AIMCo), told BNN Bloomberg’s Jon Erlichman in an interview airing Thursday.

“We would look at it. The government knows that, and we're keeping track of the situation.”

The federal Liberals bought the controversial pipeline in 2018 to save the expansion of the project to the Pacific coast from cancellation amid opposition in British Columbia. They’ve since said they plan to sell it once the project is complete.


Global diversification

AIMCo invests globally and manages nearly $160 billion in assets on behalf of 17 pension, endowment, insurance and government fund clients in Alberta.

Siddall said the fund currently invests about 44 per cent of its capital within Canada, which he added is “probably higher than we should be.”

In addition to diversifying its investments within Canada, Siddall said the fund is looking at expanding its reach in places like Australia, South America and China.

“China is a cheap place right now,” he said, noting that “it may be cheap for a reason,” but he still thinks there’s likely good value to be found in Chinese markets.

“We're significantly underweight in that region, but we're looking at it all the time. We're not opposed to the idea of investing in China … while it's not high growth now, contrarian investing tends to pay off.”


Housing 'a good investment'

Siddall said he believes Canada’s overall economic productivity, which has lagged behind other western nations in recent years, has been impacted by the heavy flow of capital into housing.

“We've made it too easy to invest in housing, and that's sucked investment capital out of retail investors, and out of institutions,” he said. “It does make sense to think about what that means.”

However, Siddall said AIMCo remains actively invested in multi-family housing in Canada.

“We think it's a good investment,” he said.

“It's a strong market in Canada and it will continue to be strong. It’s safe, and we have a very strong support structure around housing in Canada from a financial point of view.”


DON'T BUY TMX,  BUY THE REFINERY


Parkland temporarily shuts down Burnaby refinery after Jan. 21 smoke, odour

Parkland Corp. says it has temporarily shut down fuel processing at its Burnaby, B.C. refinery.

The Calgary-based fuel distributor and marketer says it paused processing operations at the refinery earlier this month due to extreme cold weather in B.C., then encountered an issue on Jan. 21 when trying to restart.

In an advisory to area residents posted on its website Jan. 21, Parkland said the issue occurred in one of the refinery units.

It said residents may notice elevated levels of smoke, odours and particulate matter coming from the refinery.

Parkland Corp. said Wednesday it expects the refinery to remain shut down for approximately four weeks.

The company said it has increased imports of fuel into its on-site terminal in order to ensure reliability of fuel supply in the Lower Mainland and on Vancouver Island.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 24, 2024.


 

Ontario privacy commissioner feels urgency to address 'Wild West' risks of AI


Ontario's information and privacy commissioner says she feels "a sense of urgency" to act on artificial intelligence as her list of concerns with the technology mounts.

Patricia Kosseim's worries about AI include it being used to spread misinformation, dupe Canadians, entrench biases and cause discrimination.

She says AI chatbots like ChatGPT, which can quickly turn simple prompts from users into detailed text, are also concerning.

"When you prompt systems like ChatGPT, what you're getting back is not an organized, curated librarian reference material," she said in an interview.

"It's the Wild West, what you're getting; not knowing what the source is, not knowing how it was created."

Kosseim's remarks come as Canada marks Data Privacy Week, an occasion that coincides with rapid advances in AI that have made the technology a talking point in nearly every industry.

Since OpenAI released ChatGPT in November 2022, an increasing number of companies are exploring how they can deploy AI while regulators consider how they can protect the public from its risks without quelling opportunities. 

Striking the right balance is often on Kosseim's mind as she considers the rapid advances AI has made over the last year.

Those advances are particularly evident when it comes to deep fakes — video, audio clips or photos where technology is used to make someone look, say or do things they have not done.

"This is where conspiracy theorists and other disinformants are just too ready to pounce in and fill those information gaps with disinformation," she said.

Malicious actors have found ways to synthetically mimic executive's voices down to their exact tone and accent, duping employees into thinking their boss is asking them to transfer funds to a perpetrator's account. 

Kosseim has said viral fake images such as one depicting an explosion of the U.S. Pentagon that triggered a brief drop in the stock market and a fabricated video of director Michael Moore voicing support for U.S. presidential nominee Donald Trump are "no laughing matter."

Kosseim feels now is the time to address such risks.

"The penny dropped. Data affects every one of us, every organization will be using and integrating AI in its processes. It is the most fundamental paradigm shift of our generation," she said.

"Technology is not just a remote sort of thing that happens in the corporate tech board rooms or laboratories."

This view is being held by legislators too. The federal government tabled a bill in June meant to place some regulation around AI in June. 

The bill is expected to be implemented no earlier than 2025. In the meantime, the feds have courted tech companies to agree to a voluntary code of conduct, which asks signatories to screen datasets for potential biases and assess any AI they create for “potential adverse impacts.”

Meanwhile, Ontario has created an AI framework to set out risk-based rules for guiding the public sector's use of AI. Kosseim provided comments during the government's public consultation, when the framework was being developed.

Ontario's Trustworthy Artificial Intelligence Framework includes ensuring AI is not used in secret by sharing information around when and how it is being deployed. The other elements of the framework include instilling trust in the use of the technology by defining and preventing its risks and guaranteeing there is a way to challenge decisions made with AI.

But Kosseim says the province needs to go even further.

Since May, she and the Ontario Human Rights Commissioner have been calling on the province to develop and implement effective guardrails on the public sector’s use of AI technologies

While their initial demand didn't outline exactly what the guardrails would be, Kosseim said any mechanisms the province lands on should be "more comprehensive, more robust, granular" and "binding."

"Binding rules backed up by enforcement creates the incentives that organizations need to focus on the right things," she said.

"It's not about punishing them after the fact. It's about encouraging them to pay attention at the front end."

Asked whether she feels her calls will be heeded, Kosseim said, "I'm hopeful. I think they're going to have to."

In response to Kosseim's push, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Public and Business Service Delivery said Ontario has a working group of experts in the sector providing advice on the province's approach to AI.

"Their expertise will help ensure that the Ontario government’s use of AI is responsible, transparent, and accountable," Nicholas Rodrigues said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 25, 2024.

This is a corrected story. A previous version stated Patricia Kosseim worked with tech and privacy experts to create an AI framework for Ontario.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 25, 2024.

 

Robots Tarzan and Jane, aided by AI, take over repetitive tasks at B.C. hospital lab

Far from the jungle, Tarzan and Jane swing quietly into action in a sterile laboratory at St. Paul's Hospital in downtown Vancouver.

They are robots that work with artificial intelligence to handle and process up to 70 per cent of the hospital's microbiology samples.

The pair unscrew specimen tubes and streak the samples onto bacterial culture plates in the new $1-million automated WASPLab, short for "walk-away specimen processor."

It's not glamorous work, but it's a big job — the St. Paul's lab handles more than 145,000 microbiological samples each year from B.C. and Yukon.

Lab automation is not new, but the hospital says WASPLab's use of AI is a first for Western Canada, assessing and sorting culture plates, separating bacterial cultures and letting staff know if something needs more analysis.

Dr. Marc Romney, head of medical microbiology and virology at St. Paul's, said the new level of automation made doctors' and lab technologists' lives easier by freeing them from repetitive manual work.

Tarzan and Jane have been working at the lab for two months. Romney said they are "great workers," willing to work early morning and late shifts and able to deal with a large batch of samples all at once. 

“We appreciate the fact that they are allowing the lab staff to perform more complex work .… So, the more routine work which is sometimes very manual is being replaced by a robot,” said Romney. 

"It gives us a lot more flexibility in our workflow," he added. 

When the robot duo first arrived, there was a lot of excitement, said Romney, as well as a little bit of apprehension from lab staff. 

"Because people think, (is) this machine going to take over my job? But ultimately, they realize no, it's going to make my life easier," said Romney. 

Tarzan and Jane each have their special skills. 

Tarzan is good at the "heavy lifting" of preparing specimens for the next stage of bacterial culture, said Romney. 

The robot picks up the specimen — it could be either a urine culture or wound swab — and scans the bar code to determine what needs to be done with it.

Then Jane does the finer work of applying a precise volume of the specimen onto the surface of the bacterial culture plates. 

The plates are placed on a conveyor belt, labelled, then stored in an incubator, allowing the bacterial colonies to grow. 

Romney said it's after incubation that the WASPLab's artificial intelligence comes into play, discarding negative culture plates while reporting the positive ones.

"This used to be all manual, and now it's automated by these two robots, Tarzan and Jane. It would have taken much longer for humans to do it," said Romney. 

The robots were created and named by Italy-based lab automation manufacturer Copan. 

The hospital said in a statement that doctors and laboratory staff spent months collaborating with Copan to customize the WASPLab to ensure it met the hospital's needs. It was funded by a donor to the St. Paul’s Foundation.

The system is not infallible. Romney said the robots occasionally make errors, and Tarzan has been known to drop tubes. 

"In real life, we know that complicated technology sometimes goes wrong, and we need to supervise it … and even Tarzan and Jane sometimes make mistakes, and so we have to have humans there to correct those mistakes when they occur," said Romney. 

Another WASPLab will be set up when the new St. Paul’s Hospital opens its doors in 2027, said Romney. 

Could robots and AI completely replace human staff in hospitals of the future?

Romney said both would play a role in health-care settings but would never completely replace medical professionals.

"If I were a patient, I'm not sure I would have total confidence in robots to provide my entire care," he said, admitting he "might be biased."

The vast majority of the time, automated systems "work really well." Romney said.

"But sometimes, it does make some errors … AI is a big part of the future in health care, a big part of the future for hospital acute care. But it's not the be-all and end-all."

He predicted that AI would instead free the next generation of physicians from "simpler work."

"But what's happening in health care is that the level of acuity and complexity in our patients is going up significantly … and I think it makes it harder for AI to make a definitive answer," said Romney.

"It's not impossible. But it requires, I think, some human intervention."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 25, 2024. 

 

U.S. FTC queries AI deals by Amazon, OpenAI, Microsoft, Anthropic

Alphabet Inc., Amazon.com Inc. and Microsoft Corp. must provide information to the US Federal Trade Commission on their investments and partnerships with artificial intelligence startups Anthropic PBC and OpenAI Inc. as part of an agency study announced Thursday.

The antitrust and consumer protection agency said it sent subpoenas to the companies to gather information on how the development of AI is impacting the competitive landscape. The inquiry focuses on more than US$19 billion in investments by Microsoft, Amazon and Google, in a series of transactions that cemented alliances between the world’s cloud services giants with the leading providers of artificial intelligence software.

Antitrust enforcers across the world have become concerned as many of the most promising AI startups now depend heavily on the old guard of dominant tech companies for their financing and infrastructure needs.

In comments during a public workshop Thursday, FTC Chair Lina Khan said the agency is closely monitoring the industry and warned that AI companies “cannot use claims of innovation as cover for law breaking.”

“There is no AI exemption from the laws on the books,” she said.

Google and Anthropic declined to comment. Microsoft, Amazon, and OpenAI didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

The inquiry comes as technology giants take a bigger role in backing nimble AI startups in a bid to claim a stake in the booming sector. Over the past year, Microsoft has revamped nearly all of its products around AI tools powered by OpenAI’s AI mode, while Google has said it has plans to embed its most powerful large language model, Gemini, into its experimental search tool sometime this year.

Microsoft has invested more than $13 billion in the ChatGPT maker OpenAI and the ouster of its CEO Sam Altman in November exposed how inextricably linked Microsoft and the company have become. Those ties have spurred antitrust reviews in both the UK and the European Union.

Meanwhile, Anthropic was founded in 2021 by former OpenAI employees, who left the company amid differences over the direction of the business. Alphabet’s Google in October committed to back it with $2 billion, and earlier this year Amazon agreed to an investment of as much as $4 billion.

The FTC is conducting the inquiry under its so-called 6(b) authority that allows it to issue subpoenas to conduct market studies. The agency generally issues a report on its findings after analyzing the information from companies, though that process can take years to complete. The agency is still finalizing the results of studies on pharmaceutical middlemen and supply chains that it started in 2021 and 2022.  

Although the information is collected for research purposes, the FTC can use any details it gleans to open official investigations or aid in existing probes. Last summer, the agency opened an investigation into whether OpenAI has violated consumer protection laws with its popular ChatGPT conversational AI bot.

The FTC and its sister agency, the Justice Department, share jurisdiction over antitrust probes and have been debating internally which should take the lead on the AI. The Justice Department has generally handled antitrust issues related to Microsoft since its blockbuster monopolization case against the Windows maker in the late 1990s. The FTC, however, recently handled Microsoft’s acquisition of game developer Activision Blizzard Inc.

In addition, the European Commission is looking into some of the agreements that have been concluded between large digital market players and generative AI developers and providers. The European Commission is investigating the impact of these partnerships on market dynamics.

With assistance from Shirin Ghaffary, Julia Love, Matt Day and Jackie Davalos.

Microsoft cuts 1,900 jobs in gaming, including at Activision

Microsoft Corp. will lay off 1,900 people across its video-game divisions including at Activision Blizzard, which it purchased for US$69 billion in an acquisition that closed late last year.

In an email to staff reviewed by Bloomberg, Microsoft gaming chief Phil Spencer wrote that the cuts represented about eight per cent of Microsoft’s 22,000 gaming workers. The Verge first reported the news. Other video game companies, including Riot Games, have also enacted mass layoffs.

“Together, we’ve set priorities, identified areas of overlap, and ensured that we’re all aligned on the best opportunities for growth,” Spencer wrote.

Blizzard Entertainment is also making big changes as part of the cuts, cancelling a survival game codenamed Odyssey and parting ways with President Mike Ybarra and Chief Design Officer Allen Adham, the company’s co-founder.

In a note to staff, Microsoft Studios President Matt Booty said that Ybarra “has decided to leave the company.” At the BlizzCon convention in November, Ybarra said in an interview that he wanted to stay at the company for the long haul. “Someone will drag me out of Blizzard,” he said. “That’s how long I will be here.”

On Thursday, Ybarra announced his departure in a post on X, the website formerly known as Twitter. “Having already spent 20+ years at Microsoft and with the acquisition of Activision Blizzard behind us, it’s time for me to (once again) become Blizzard’s biggest fan from the outside,” Ybarra wrote. 

The moves arrived just three months after Microsoft finalized the Activision Blizzard acquisition. In an email to staff reviewed by Bloomberg, Activision Publishing chief Rob Kostich wrote that the cuts were made “to reset and re-align our resources for the future.”

ABOLISH THE DEATH PENALTY

Masks made by Canadian-owned firm to be used in U.S. prisoner execution, groups say

Alabama lethal injection chamber

Masks made by the subsidiary of a Quebec-based company are being used for executions in the United States, justice advocacy groups say.

Alabama plans to execute inmate Kenneth Smith on Thursday by nitrogen hypoxia, in which breathable air is replaced with nitrogen gas, depriving the body of oxygen.

The mask and hose to be used, which typically function as a respirator, are made by Allegro Industries, according to U.S.-based non-profits Worth Rises and the Responsible Business Initiative for Justice. Allegro, located in South Carolina, is a subsidiary of Quebec-based Walter Surface Technologies, which in turn is partly owned by Toronto private equity firm Onex Corp.

“We don’t believe that anyone, any corporation, should be profiting off of death dealing," said Dana Floberg, director of corporate campaigns at Worth Rises.

“There’s an argument to be made that this is also inhumane because it qualifies as doing experimental testing on a human being.”


Smith, 58, would be the first inmate in the U.S. to face the untested method of capital punishment.

Earlier this month, the United Nations Human Rights Office said the method may cause serious suffering and warned that it "will likely violate the prohibition on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment."

“We are concerned that nitrogen hypoxia would result in a painful and humiliating death,” UN experts said in a statement on Jan. 3. They comprise four special rapporteurs on execution, torture, mental health and the justice system: Morris Tidball-Binz, Alice Jill Edwards, Tlaeng Mofokeng and Margaret Satterthwaite, respectively.

As a mode of mammal euthanasia, nitrogen asphyxiation is acceptable only for pigs, according to the American Veterinary Medical Association. Other species should first be rendered unconscious "via an acceptable method," the 2020 guidelines state.

Alabama's approach includes no initial sedatives.

The companies have not responded to requests for comment.

Correctional authorities have found it increasingly difficult to obtain the chemicals needed for lethal injection due to pharmaceutical companies banning the use of their products for that purpose, prompting several states including Oklahoma and Mississippi to authorize nitrogen gas as a way to execute inmates on death row — though Thursday would be the first instance.

In 1989, Smith and another man were convicted in the murder-for-hire killing of a woman in northwestern Alabama.

Smith and John Forrest Parker were each paid US$1,000 to kill Elizabeth Sennett on behalf of her preacher husband, Charles Sennett, who was deeply in debt and aimed to collect the life insurance, prosecutors said.

After a 1996 retrial, Smith was again convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death by electrocution.

Parker was executed by lethal injection in 2010. Sennett died by suicide during the course of the murder investigation.


Smith has languished on death row for more than three decades. In 2022, prison officials with Alabama’s department of corrections botched a lethal injection, puncturing his body repeatedly over the course of several hours but failing to find a vein before the execution was called off.

On Jan. 10, a federal judge approved Smith’s execution by nitrogen hypoxia.

Last week, the state attorney general's office told federal appeals court judges that it is "the most painless and humane method of execution known to man."

But what exactly Smith will experience after the warden switches on the gas is unknown, some doctors and critics say.

“What effect the condemned person will feel from the nitrogen gas itself, no one knows,” Dr. Jeffrey Keller, president of the American College of Correctional Physicians, wrote in an email. “This has never been done before. It is an experimental procedure.”

Canada effectively abolished the death penalty in 1963, when governments began to commute all death sentences. Capital punishment for murder was banned via legislation in 1976, and the death penalty for any offence — spying for the enemy, for example — was outlawed in 1999.

The last execution in Canada occurred by hanging at Toronto’s Don Jail in December 1962.

With files from The Associated Press

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 24, 2024.