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.

Ongoing History Daily: The first-ever photo posted online involved music

Millions and millions of photos are posted online every single day. But who was first? It was a band.

Back in 1992, a graphic designer at the massive CERN particle physics complex in Europe named Michele de Genarro was in a group with three other women. They were called Les Horribles Cernettes and played gigs for the scientists and staff. After a show in July 1992, a colleague named Tim Berners-Lee scanned some pictures he’d taken of the group with the idea of posting them on this new information system he had invented. This thing was called the World Wide Web, and the picture of the Cernettes ended up at the address info.cern.ch, which was one of the very first modern Internet addresses.

That cemented this band’s place in history for all time.

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

AI giant Anthropic files for IPO in U.S. markets

WATCH ABOVE: Anthropic claims its new AI model too risky to release to public

AI giant Anthropic said on Monday it has confidentially filed for a U.S. initial public offering, teeing up what could become a watershed moment for Wall Street’s AI frenzy.

The move sets up a high-stakes test of whether investor appetite for the AI revolution that has reshaped white-collar work around the world can match the sky-high expectations surrounding the booming sector.

Anthropic, which operates AI chatbot Claude, did not disclose the size or the terms of the offering. It last raised US$65 billion at a post-money valuation of $965 billion in late May, putting it ahead of rival OpenAI.

The crucial step toward a listing comes on the heels of SpaceX’s mega-IPO, which is on course to rewrite the record books as the Elon Musk-led company pursues a US$75 billion offering at a US$1.75 trillion valuation.

Rival OpenAI and Anthropic have become the face of the AI boom that has redrawn corporate strategies, sparked a global arms race for computing power and talent, and turned AI-linked companies into some of the market’s most richly valued firms.

Anthropic’s valuation has more ​than doubled from US$380 billion in February, when it raised US$30 billion in a funding round.

The company’s rapid rise in early 2026 rattled markets, triggering sharp selloffs in software and IT stocks as investors worried its increasingly autonomous AI tools could upend traditional business models and accelerate disruption across industries.

OpenAI is also preparing to confidentially file for a U.S. IPO in the coming weeks, a source ​familiar with the matter told Reuters in late May, adding to a wave of blockbuster ‌listings anticipated in the year ahead.

As a slew of blockbuster listings races toward public markets, companies from SpaceX to AI giants are competing for a finite pool of investor capital.

The listing would represent one of the most consequential stock market debuts in years, potentially reshaping benchmark indexes, investor flows and the broader narrative driving U.S. equities.

At close to a US$1 trillion valuation, Anthropic would vault into the top tier of the S&P 500, alongside a handful of elite companies that dominate global equity markets.

An Anthropic debut would be a major boost for the long-sluggish IPO market, though experts and bankers warn an offering of such scale could drain liquidity and investor attention from smaller listings.

© 2026 Reuters

‘Alaskan Bush People’ star Matt Brown found dead in Washington state river

Human remains discovered in a river in Washington state have been identified by police as those of 42-year-old Alaskan Bush People star Matt Brown, days after family members took to social media to address speculation that the body of the reality show cast member had been spotted.

The Okanogan County Sheriff said Brown was discovered Saturday along the Okanogan River by a private search party and later formally identified by the coroner’s office, according to a Facebook update.

“The cause and manner of death will be determined by the Coroner’s Office,” the department added Sunday, before sending its condolences to Brown’s family and loved ones.

Police said that a body was first reported floating face down in the Okanogan River by a passerby on May 27, who said they had just spoken to a man sitting in the river, according to an earlier news release.

“A caller reported to Okanogan 911 that he had just spoken to a male sitting in the shallow water of the Okanogan River south of Oroville, WA. The caller turned away from the man sitting in the river, heard a sound, turned back toward the man in the water and saw the man was face down in the water drifting away in the current,” the release says.

In another statement detailing subsequent search efforts, the sheriff’s office said: “Deputies and a Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife agent used boats, personal watercraft, sonar and divers to search an expanding area near the last location the male was seen.”

The search was suspended on Friday due to poor weather conditions, it added. Brown’s body was discovered the following day by the private search operation, authorities said.

His brothers, Noah and Bear, who also appear on the show, both made statements over the weekend from their verified social media accounts, addressing their sibling’s death.

In a series of videos posted over the past week — two of which have garnered millions of views — Bear said in a Sunday update that he had been told his brother had been found and may have died by suicide, but stressed he could not confirm the information.

He explained that his brother had struggled with alcohol and drugs, which Matt was open about with viewers and addressed in a 2016 People interview, but that he had become estranged from the family, who had tried but were unable to help in his recovery.

Bear said in his most recent video that Noah was with the private search party and identified the body pulled from the river as Brown’s on Sunday.

“I identified it as Matthew,” Noah said in an Instagram post. “My oldest brother, Matthew Brown, has passed away,” he continued.

Brown appeared in 79 episodes of Discovery’s reality show Alaskan Bush People from when it first aired in 2014 until 2019, according to IMDb. The show followed the Brown family — parents Billy and Ami and their seven children — as they navigated life in the deep Alaskan wilderness, far from civilization.

After quitting the show, Brown started a YouTube channel where he filmed and shared his life and recovery journey, interspersed with personal reflections. He built a following of 65,000 subscribers and amassed eight million views on more than 1,000 videos, NBC News reported.

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

Algoma Steel picked for materials in defence vehicle manufacturing deal

Weeks after accepting a loan of $500 million from the provincial and federal governments, Algoma Steel announced it will layoff roughly 1,000 workers. Local union leadership joined Focus Ontario to discuss that decision and the future of their members.

South Korean defence firm Hanwha says it has reached a deal with Algoma Steel to supply military-grade steel for the possible manufacturing of land defence vehicles in Canada.

Hanwha said in April it had reached a separate agreement with Canada’s Automotive Parts Manufacturers’ Association on a prospective joint venture to make military land vehicles for the Canadian Armed Forces and for export to allies.

These agreements, which would support industries hit hard by U.S. tariffs, are contingent on Hanwha winning Canada’s contract to supply the navy with a fleet of up to 12 submarines.

The South Korean submarine maker is competing with Germany’s TKMS for the massive multi-billion dollar contract.

Hanwha made the steel announcement at a Martinrea International facility in Vaughan, Ont., alongside a delegation of South Korean government officials.

Canadian officials said at an arms expo in Ottawa last week that the federal government is expected to announce the winner of the sub contract this month.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

June 6 - Harmony At Rutherford

Harmony at Rutherford is dedicated to providing elevated senior living. Don’t miss the upcoming Open House at Harmony At Rutherford this Saturday, where you can tour the last few remaining vacant suites AND enjoy complimentary refreshments!

Join 880 CHED’s Talk To The Experts on Saturday, June 6th with guests from Harmony at Rutherford discussing their spacious suites, engaging activities, and the Harmony Dining Club.

Harmony at Rutherford, where you can do what you want, when you want!

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

June 6 - Bathrooms Bathrooms Bathrooms

Are you finding it harder to get out of the bathtub?
With over 80% of accidents happening in the bathroom, nothing is more important for your safety.

Tune in to Talk To The Experts this Saturday when Shane from Bathrooms Bathrooms Bathrooms will tell you how to make your bathroom both beautiful and functional. Shane explains the whole process of replacing your tired old tub with a beautiful new Italian porcelain walk-in shower.

Transform your bathroom into a space that looks better, functions better, and lasts longer. At Bathrooms Bathrooms Bathrooms, they specialize in full bathroom renovations in Edmonton, delivering results that go far beyond surface-level upgrades.

Whether you’re dealing with outdated layouts, water damage, or mold behind the walls, Bathrooms Bathrooms Bathrooms takes a full-scope approach. They remove what’s failing, rebuild the space properly, and finish with modern fixtures, durable materials, and clean, timeless design tailored to how you use your home.

Visit bathroomsbathroomsbathrooms.com to see their work and don’t miss Talk To The Experts this Saturday.

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

Homicide unit investigating after body of missing man found along Ontario shoreline

Hamilton Police say a homicide investigation is underway after a body found in Hamilton Harbour was identified as a that of missing man.

The body of Marcin Sydor was found near Pier 16, near 386 Wilcox Street, around 8 a.m. on Friday, police told reporters Monday.

The death was ruled a homicide following a post-mortem. Police say the cause of death and details of the injuries will not be released at this time, but the manner in which the body was found was deemed suspicious.

Sydor, 48, was reported missing in April. Police say he was last seen on April 21 driving a black 2014 Volkswagen Jetta with tinted windows. He had not had any contact with his family since that date.

Police say Sydor’s case was being investigated as a missing persons case until the body was found. The homicide unit has now taken over.

Police say the disappearance was “out of character” for Sydor.

Anyone with information about Sydor’s disappearance of the vehicle he was driving is asked to contact police.

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

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