Ongoing History Daily: The Marconi radio hack

We hear plenty of stories about hackers getting into computer systems and devices—viruses, man-in-the-middle attacks, DDos storms, malware, ransomware and the like. But would you believe the first electronic hack happened in 1903? Guglielmo Marconi, the father of modern radio, had come up with the concept of point-to-point wireless radio transmissions.

“By tuning a transmitter to a specific frequency,” he said, “you can securely reach another party who has tuned to exactly the same frequency.”

This greatly annoyed telegraph companies, who didn’t want to be put out of business. One of these telegraph operators, a guy named Nevil Maskelyne, heard about a demonstration Marconi was giving. Using his own transmitter, he hacked into Marconi’s test broadcast, spelling out the word “rats” over and over in Morse code. Then he keyed in a rude limerick that began “There was a young fellow from Italy, who diddled the public quite prettily.”

I guess this makes Maskelyne the first-ever black hat hacker.

© 2026 Corus Radio, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Ongoing History Daily: The odd economic boost given to punk

For years, the top weekly music magazine in the UK was Melody Maker. Since the only radio came from the BBC, fans of pop and rock relied on The Maker for news on what was hot and new and worth listening to. Anyone who appeared on the cover suddenly sold hundreds of thousands of records.

Melody Maker also covered plenty of artists from North America and had an office and stringers in the US. But in the mid-70s, the pound fell sharply against the US dollar, forcing Melody Maker to close its American operations and to scale back its coverage of music on this side of the Atlantic.

For content, they redirected their music coverage to what was happening at home in the UK. And the mid-70s, that was punk. Melody Maker joined their rival, The New Musical Express, in highlighting and reinforcing the presence of this new music, which went a long way to making it successful with the public.

Weird how things happen sometimes, huh?

© 2026 Corus Radio, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Ongoing History Daily: The forgotten music format wars of the late 90s

From the moment Edison unveiled his talking machine in August 1877, there was a race to create recordings with greater fidelity and realism. The technology led us from wax cylinders to rotating discs to vinyl records and compact discs.

But then something weird happened around 2000: consumers started becoming apathetic when it came to high-fidelity music. Why? The MP3. The convenience digital files offer trumped their inferior sound. But leading up to the rise of the MP3, dozens of companies kept pushing for ever-better-sounding music technologies.

Sony had the MiniDisc, which wasn’t much a hit outside of Japan. There was Super Audio CD, which was a joint venture of Sony and Philips, the people behind the original CD. It was up against HD-CD, which eventually became the property of Microsoft. But none of these new physical formats mattered.

Digital files killed them all.

© 2026 Corus Radio, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Police tackle Toronto cyclist after he allegedly blew through stop sign

Police in Toronto are facing questions for intense takedown efforts to stop a cyclist who allegedly blew through a stop sign on the city’s waterfront.

A video posted to social media appears to show a cyclist near Bathurst Street and Queens Quay, near Little Norway Park, being tackled to the ground by multiple police officers who were stopping and ticketing people failing to obey a stop sign.

In the video, the cyclist appears to complain he’s in pain as more officers rush over to restrain him.

Lawyer Dave Shellnut, who runs a firm specializing in defending cyclists, said the police response was disproportionate to the situation.

“This is a Highway Traffic (Act) matter, you are not supposed to use force in this situation,” he told Global News. “It was really scary to see multiple officers lay upon a fellow cyclist.”

He said the law was written with the understanding officers weren’t to tackle or pursue vehicles that break traffic rules.

“If there’s a car that’s speeding and trying to get away from police, they are not supposed to engage in a pursuit,” he said. “They have other means to track this person; let them go. Alert the officers up the road.”

Police said they had tried to stop the cyclist, but claimed he sped past them, shouted profanities and tried to flee the second officer who stopped him.

Officers with Toronto police have been stepping up enforcement of stop signs in parts of the city after complaints about cyclists blowing through them.

Investigators said the cyclist in the video was arrested and faces three provincial offence charges.

— with files from Global News’ Victoria Femia

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Elks aim to shed losing past with strong start

EDMONTON – Of all the questions surrounding the Edmonton Elks heading into this CFL season, the only one that really matters is: can they win?

The last time the franchise had a winning record was 2017, 12-6 when they were still the storied Eskimos. The team’s horrid starts for the last five seasons have been well documented, discussed and dissected.

And second-year head coach Mark Kilam has had enough of the questions.

“I’m tired of that narrative,” Kilam said late in training camp. “I’ve only been here for one year. None of these guys were here for any of that stuff and we’re creating our own narrative and we’re focused on the task at hand.”

That’s the same attitude of most of the players, including quarterback Cody Fajardo.

“Everybody’s been doom and gloom around this organization for so many years,” said Fajardo, who had his contract extended in the off-season and was handed the team’s starting quarterback position. “The only way you can change that narrative is by winning games. But I felt we did enough last year to create momentum; we just have to create the momentum (this season) by starting fast.”

After a 1-6 start in 2025 the Elks finished 7-11, missing the playoffs for a fifth straight year. That prompted significant changes in personnel on both sides of the football.

General manager Ed Hervey focused on bolstering the offensive line, improving the receiving corps and strengthening the defence.

The offensive line was one obvious weakness with Fajardo sacked more than another quarterback last year when the line gave 52 sacks, second most in the league.

Hervey brought in Coulter Woodmansey — one of the top Canadian linemen available in the free agency pool — Brendan Bordner and Jordan Murray to bolster the line anchored by returnees Mark Korte, David Beard and Carter O’Donnell.

Kilam is hoping those changes will provide the necessary protection for Fajardo and backup Taylor Powell, obtained from Hamilton, and open holes for running back Justin Rankin.

“I feel real good about guys they brought in, good to come back to the same offence and just hone in on everything we did last year,” said Rankin, who rushed for 1,013 yards and nine touchdowns in 2025.

“We’ve got a lot of guys who care about football and care about winning. It’s a very physical team, physical nasty on the line, physical receivers.”

The receiving core got a major upgrade with the addition of free agent wide receivers Austin Mack from Montreal and Brendan O’Leary-Orange from Hamilton.

While the Elks lost receivers Kurleigh Gittens Jr. and Steven Dunbar Jr., and released Binjimen Victor, they retained last season’s top receiver, Kaion Julien-Grant. The six-foot-two, 210-pound Julien-Grant, a Toronto native, led the team last season with 57 receptions for 820 yards and seven touchdowns.

The defence is mostly unchanged. Newcomer Malik Carney joins Robbie Smith, Jordan Brinkman, Noah Taylor and Jordan Williams on the line.

The only significant loss among the defensive backs is Nyles Morgan in the middle. Brock Morgenson and Nick Anderson will fill that spot. The corners are again manned by Tyrell Ford and J.J. Ross with Joel Dublanko, Kordell Jackson, Chelen Garnes, Kobe Williams and Kenneth Logan Jr. all returning to fill the halfback positions.

As well, Kilam, offensive co-ordinator Jordan Maksymic and defensive coordinator J.C. Sherritt have a season of working together, learning each other’s tendencies and figuring out to work together for the benefit of the team.

“There’s a lot more charity, a lot more familiarity, we understand each other a bit more,” Kilam said of working the year with Maksymic. but it could include all the staff. “Working with somebody in a stressful situation on a daily basis, and that’s what pro football is, you have to go through a little bit of that to find best practices.

The Elks open their regular season Saturday in Ottawa against the Redblacks.

SEASON SNAPSHOT

2025 record: 7-11, fifth, West Division

Did you know? Only three players have been with the Elks for four seasons or more.

Key additions: WR Austin Mack (Montreal), WR Brendan O’Leary-Orange (Hamilton), QB Taylor Powell (Hamilton), DL Malik Carney (Sask).

Key losses: WR Kurleigh Gittens Jr. (Hamilton), QB Tre Ford (Hamilton), LB Nyles Morgan (Ottawa).

Players to watch: Mack, RB Justin Rankin, MLB Nick Anderson.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 2, 2026.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Lions look to build on foundation laid last year

VANCOUVER – Last season, the BC Lions were just 11 seconds away from advancing to their first Grey Cup since 2011.

A Trevor Harris pass to Tommy Nield in the dying moments of the Western Final gave the Saskatchewan Roughriders a 24-21 victory. The Riders would go on to defeat the Montreal Alouettes for the CFL championship, while the Lions had a long winter to think about what might have been.

With a new campaign approaching, B.C. defensive end Mathieu Betts said the Lions have moved on from last season’s heartbreak and are focused on what lies ahead.

“If you lose on the last play of the game, or you lose by 30 points … we didn’t get it done,” said Betts, the first Canadian to win the CFL’s Most Outstanding Defensive Player award twice. “To be that close, it’s frustrating.”

“For me, the motivation is to win the Grey Cup. It’s a clean slate. We’re moving forward. We know we have to play good football consistently throughout the year, start early and make sure we finish fast.”

Buck Pierce, the Lions’ head coach and offensive co-ordinator, believes the team is building on last season’s progress.

“Some of the things that we did throughout the course of the season, the lessons we learned, where we got to, was good growth,” said the former CFL quarterback. “What I’ve been preaching to the guys is that we’ve learned those lessons last year. We’ve got to make sure we don’t repeat some mistakes.

“I think there’s an understanding of what winning football needs to look like, what our daily process needs to look like. The expectations in the meeting rooms, the expectations for practice, I think those are established now.”

After an up-and-down first half of last season, the Lions won their final six games to finish second in the West with an 11-7 record, then beat Calgary in the conference semifinal.

B.C.’s high-octane offence led the league in net offence (7,743 yards), points (559) and touchdowns (59), but the defence gave up the third-most points (499) of any CFL team.

Quarterback Nathan Rourke was named the league’s Most Outstanding Player and Most Outstanding Canadian after completing 353 of 500 passes for 5,290 yards, 31 touchdowns and 16 interceptions. He comes into the season having signed an extension that will keep him with the club through 2028.

One of Rourke’s favourite targets last year was Keon Hatcher Sr., who led the league with 102 catches for 1,688 yards. Canadian Justin McInnis was third overall with 76 catches for 1,256 yards.

The Lions also have American Stanley Berryhill (54 catches, 715 yards) and national Jevon Cottoy (55-681).

While the Lions lost American receiver Ayden Eberhardt to free agency, they took Mississauga, Ont., native Nate DeMontagnac from the University of North Dakota seventh overall in this year’s draft.

Running back James Butler, who was third overall last year with 1,213 yards and 11 touchdowns on 229 carries, re-upped on a two-year deal.

“He is a major part of our offence,” said Pierce. “We’re continuing to develop him in different facets, to be able to do more things and utilize him in multiple ways.”

In a move to stiffen their defence, the Lions dipped into free agency for American linebacker Darnell Sankey, who spent last season with the Montreal Alouettes and former Hamilton Tiger-Cats defensive lineman Casey Sayles.

Bettes said Sankey, who had 101 tackles and two sacks last year, is a proven veteran.

“He’s an elite linebacker,” said Bettes, who led the league with 15 sacks last year. “He’s coming in with the task to learn the defence. I feel like he’s going to be really good for us starting with our first game, but he’s only going to improve throughout the year.”

Last season served as a learning curve for both the coaching staff and players. Pierce and defensive co-ordinator Mike Benevides were in their first years in those roles, introducing new terminology and processes.

Rourke said everyone has a better grasp of the playbook this season.

“I’m excited about the opportunity again to work with Buck, take this offence to the next level,” said the 28-year-old Victoria native. “Hopefully to continue to build on what we did last year.”

The Lions will also face an unusual schedule to start the season because of the FIFA World Cup. With BC Place hosting seven tournament matches, B.C. won’t play in Vancouver until July 25 against Toronto.

The Lions, who held training camp in Kamloops and played an exhibition game in Langford, will open the regular season with road games in Regina on June 13 and Hamilton on June 18. They will host Calgary and Edmonton in Kelowna before returning to BC Place.

Rourke said the team will need to adapt.

“Guys love a routine at this level,” he said. “It’s going to be challenging. You have to be flexible.”

SEASON SNAPSHOT

2025 record: 11-7, second, West Division

Did you know?: Kelowna’s Apple Bowl is being expanded from its regular capacity of 2,314 to more than 17,000 for the Lions’ first two home games on June 27 and July 4. BC Place is unavailable because of the World Cup.

Key additions: LB Darnell Sankey (Montreal); DL Casey Sayles (Hamilton); OL Joshua Donovan (Toronto); WR Nate DeMontagnac (University of North Dakota).

Key losses: OL Jarell Broxton (Winnipeg); WR Ayden Eberhard (Ottawa); LB Josh Wood (Saskatchewan); LB Micah Awe (Montreal).

Players to watch: QB Nathan Rourke; RB James Butler; WR Keon Hatcher; WR Justin McInnis; DE Mathieu Betts; K Sean Whyte.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 2, 2026.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Child, 3, dies from injuries after bouncy castle swept up by wind in Montreal

RELATED: 3-year-old critically injured after bouncy castle swept up by strong winds in Montreal

A three-year-old child has died after being injured when a bouncy castle was lifted into the air by strong winds during a community event in Montreal over the weekend.

The Quebec coroner’s office confirmed the child’s death on Tuesday, with the office confirming Martine Lachance would conduct an investigation into the causes and circumstances surrounding the death.

Emergency crews were called to Ouellette Park in Montreal’s LaSalle borough on Sunday shortly after 4:30 p.m. after witnesses reported that the inflatable structure had been swept up by gusts with children inside.

Witnesses described the chaotic scene, saying the bouncy castle rose dozens of feet into the air before being thrown back to the ground, with one person saying it may have flown 30 to 40 feet high.

According to Urgences-santé, 11 people were injured, with six taken to hospital, including two children.

The incident occurred during a community celebration organized by the Madre dei Cristiani church.

Environment Canada reported wind gusts of 50 kilometres per hour in the area at the time.

People at the event said the incident unfolded in minutes, leaving little time to react.

Debris was being cleared by city crews on Monday as officials worked to determine what led to the incident.

Authorities say the investigation is ongoing.

Lachance could make recommendations depending on the results of her investigation, which would be aimed towards protecting human life and preventing deaths in similar circumstances.

— with files from Global News’ Alessia Simona Maratta and Felicia Parrillo

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

After Pope slams AI, can employees request religious AI exemptions at work?

Pope Leo has released his first encyclical, which included a warning about the need to regulate artificial intelligence. Redmond Shannon explains how the pontiff wants governments to disarm AI, and how Leo's document is reminiscent of a similar encyclical from his namesake Leo the 13th.

Some Canadians may have a case for requesting religious exemptions from artificial intelligence usage in the workplace, following formal Catholic Church warnings from Pope Leo XIV about the technology.

But experts caution that requesting religious exemptions is not simple, and the question of where reasonable accommodation lies with an emerging and largely unregulated technology is still murky.

The Pope’s sweeping manifesto calls for the robust regulation of artificial intelligence, warning in his 42,300-word encyclical letter that “technology is not simply a tool.”

“When it becomes the standard by which everything is judged, it begins to dictate what matters and what can be discarded, reducing creation to an object of exploitation and human beings to mere cogs in a system driven toward ever greater efficiency,” the Pope said.

“What is needed is a more active political involvement that is capable of slowing things down when everything is accelerating,” Pope Leo said in the text, entitled Magnifica Humanitas, or Magnificent ​Humanity.

He also states there is a “subtler danger” for AI usage, calling for “robust legal frameworks, independent oversight, informed users and a political system that does not abdicate its ​responsibility.”

Leo also called upon AI developers to work for the common good rather than profit.

“Just as the creator of an artistic or literary work must consider the values it conveys, so developers are called to embed values in their projects with due seriousness: with transparency, responsibility toward affected communities and careful attention to ensuring that what is being cultivated is a genuine good.”

Prime Minister Mark Carney — who is a practising Catholic — is poised to reveal his government’s long-awaited AI strategy this week following repeated delays.

He discussed the topic of artificial intelligence with Pope Leo on Friday, with Carney “welcoming the Pope’s leadership in this field.”

“They discussed the imperative that AI must serve humanity, beginning with the protection of the individual. Prime Minister Carney expressed Canada’s desire to lead internationally on responsible AI and tools to benefit the global community,” the Prime Minister’s Office said in a readout of the call.

The federal government is expected to announce its long-awaited national AI strategy this week.

The Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, Canada’s national assembly of the bishops of the Catholic Church, also described the Pope’s letter by saying it “places the dignity of the human person at the centre as the criteria for guiding technical progress.”

“The Church’s social teaching accompanies these transformations, pointing to the common good, solidarity and subsidiarity as the fundamental benchmarks for understanding and interpreting the transformation currently underway,” according to the assembly’s media release.

Formal religious writings on the subject might leave some Canadians wondering whether they can seek a religious exemption from using artificial intelligence in their jobs.

The Canadian Human Rights Act aims to “extent the laws in Canada that proscribe discrimination,” while the Ontario Human Rights Code is a statute that states that “every person has a right to equal treatment with respect to the occupancy of accommodation, without discrimination because of race, ancestry, place of origin, colour, ethnic origin, citizenship, creed, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, age, marital status, family status, disability or the receipt of public assistance.”

Christopher Achkar, a managing partner at Achkar Law, states that those laws could potentially be cited by Canadian employees in a request for religious accommodation.

“Employees can cite those religious reasons as reasons to be accommodated and not have to use AI,” he said.

“Because these two pieces of legislation protect against discrimination on the basis of those grounds, employers have to accommodate those employees when they cite that they are part of those groups that subscribe to those beliefs.

“If there are religious groups, for example, and in this case not using AI for religious reasons, then the code protects them from being terminated, discriminated against or treated differently or adversely because of these reasons, so employers have to accommodate.”

However, Puneet Tiwari, an employment lawyer and partner of Leavitt LLP, said this applies to an employer unless there is “undue hardship.”

This refers to the point at which an employer is no longer legally required to accommodate an employee.

In Canadian employment law, employers must accommodate employees to this point — not to the point of inconvenience, preference or minor disruption.

“There’s no blanket answer. It has to be taken in on a case-by-case basis,” Tiwari said.

Aaron Zaltzman, an associate with Whitten & Lublin Employment Lawyers, said that “if it is a religious belief, then the employee would be entitled to reasonable accommodation.”

“I actually think the hardest hurdle there would be proving that it’s a religious belief,” he said.

“AI is obviously not something that was contemplated when the Torah or the Bible or most current religious texts for mainstream religions were written. So, the question of whether objections to AI as a religious belief is very up to interpretation.”

Achkar also stated that if “one employee out of 50 who cites religion as a reason not to use AI, then the employer will have a harder time saying no to that employee and they would have to accommodate them.” 

He also added that in the future, there could be adjustments to laws already in place to meet these needs.

“It is certainly an evolving field, and it has to have effects on the existing laws in place, so I definitely see that coming into force within different acts around.”

Tiwari said accommodation “is a two-way street.”

“So the employer and the employee can engage in a dialogue to see, ‘Hey, are there any solutions?'”

New data from the non-profit Angus Reid Institute released Tuesday found two-thirds of Canadians (68 per cent) say it is government’s place to heavily regulate AI and tech companies, even if doing so slows development.

However, three-quarters (74 per cent) doubt any government is truly equipped to keep pace with the technology.

In addition, the poll found that just one in six (16 per cent) of Canadians would leave it to tech companies to self-regulate.

— with files from Reuters

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

U.S. job openings rose in April, despite economic fallout from Iran war

WATCH ABOVE: Canada loses 18k jobs as manufacturing sector takes major hit

U.S. job openings jumped in April as the labor market looked resilient despite economic uncertainty caused by the Iran war.

U.S. employers posted 7.6 million job vacancies in April, the Labor Department reported Tuesday, up from 6.9 million in March and most since May 2024. Economists had forecast just 6.8 million openings.

The department’s Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) showed that layoffs fell but so did the number of Americans quitting their jobs – a sign of confidence in their prospects. And the report’s measure of gross hiring also dropped in April, suggesting that companies remain reluctant to add new workers even as they hold on to the ones they have.

The American job market has been recovering from a dismal 2025. Last year, companies, nonprofits and government agencies added fewer than 10,000 jobs a month, least outside a recession since 2002.

This year has been better — job growth averaged 76,000 a month from January through April. Big tax refunds — the product of President Donald Trump’s sweeping tax cut bill last year — have given the economy a lift this year, offsetting the impact of sharply higher energy prices since the United States and Israel attacked Iran Feb. 28. But the refunds have mostly been paid out and are fading as an economic booster.

The United States also doesn’t need as many new jobs as it used to. Trump’s immigration crackdown and Baby Boomer retirements mean that fewer people are competing for work. As a result, the so-called break-even point — the number of new jobs needed every month to keep the unemployment rate stable — has dropped to near zero from 155,000 a month two or three years ago, according to an April report by Federal Reserve economists Seth Murray and Ivan Vidangos.

On Friday, the Labor Department will issue its job report for May. The numbers are expected to show that employers added 100,000 jobs last month, according to a survey of forecasters by the data firm FactSet. The unemployment rate is expected to have stayed at a low 4.3 per cent.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

12-year-old boy in critical condition after being hit with baseball: reports

A 12-year-old New Jersey boy is in critical condition and on a ventilator days after being hit with a baseball in the neck during pregame warmups, according to U.S. media reports.

Xavier Taylor, a player with Maple Shade Youth Baseball, was walking back to the dugout at Fellowship Columbia Bank Field on May 26 when he was hit with a baseball in the neck.

After Xavier was struck, he collapsed on the field and was airlifted to Cooper University Hospital in Camden, N.J., NBC News reports.

Xavier’s father, Greg Taylor, told CBS Philadelphia that “an unpredicted ball got loose from one of the players and struck him in his neck and he collapsed on the ground.”

This week, Greg told NBC News that his son is still in “very critical condition” and on a ventilator.

“We’re pushing day by day in hope that the activity comes back,” Greg said.

Greg said that his youngest son brought a pair of shoes to the hospital when they first arrived with Xavier after he was struck.

The youngest son told his parents, “These are for Xavier when he comes home, because he’s walking out of here.”

The Maple Shade community has come together to help raise money for the Taylor family, with organized meals throughout the summer.

The Meal Train fundraiser had raised more than US$110,000 of its $2,500 goal from more than 1,400 donations as of Tuesday morning.

The president of the Maple Shade Baseball Association said they submitted their incident report to the Babe Ruth League Headquarters and Maple Shade Township Police Department, CBS Philadelphia reports.

Global News has reached out to The Maple Shade Youth Baseball Association and Maple Shade Police Department for further comment but has not received a response.

The Maple Shade Youth Baseball Association released a statement on Monday, writing, “First and foremost, we want to thank our entire Maple Shade Youth Baseball family for your understanding as our league leadership, coaches, volunteers, and families took the time needed to support the Taylor family during this incredibly difficult week.”

“After speaking with the Taylor family and having thoughtful discussions among our Board and coaching staff, we have made the decision to continue with our season. We ask for your patience and understanding as we work through what the remainder of this season will look like,” the organization added.

The Maple Shade Youth Baseball Association also announced that it will cancel the remainder of the major season only, as well as the closing ceremonies scheduled for June 12. League play will resume only for T-Ball, Rookie and Minor divisions.

“We know many families have questions, and we appreciate your continued patience as we navigate the weeks ahead. Our focus remains on supporting the Taylor family while also providing an opportunity for our players to return to the game they love. More importantly, the game Xavier loves,” the statement added.

Xavier’s baseball league has been raising awareness about his condition in its Facebook group and the Maple Shade community gathered at the field Thursday night for a candlelight vigil, where some attendees wore Xavier’s team number, 6. There was also a second vigil outside the hospital on Saturday.

The baseball association created a “bats out for X” initiative that took place on Sunday evening and the Maple Shade community supported Xavier by lighting up its Main Street with blue lights in reference to his team’s colour. Players were asked to place one baseball bat out on their front porch as the community rallied together for Xavier “while he battles to recover from a freak accident on the baseball field.”

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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