New federal AI strategy looks to close ‘adoption gap,’ build public trust
Ottawa wants to increase Canadians’ use of artificial intelligence — and it plans to do so through free AI training and legislation to tackle concerns like surveillance pricing and chatbot safety.
Announcing the government’s new AI strategy in Toronto on Thursday, Prime Minister Mark Carney said “globally, Canada ranks near the bottom of countries in AI training, in literacy and trust.”
That long-awaited strategy says Canada has “a major adoption gap.” It says closing the gap in training and literacy “is the foundation on which everything else depends.”
A new literacy initiative will offer entry-level AI training to all Canadians and the government will ensure “all post-secondary students have access to trusted AI agents,” the document says.


