As the city's tech sector races to deploy artificial intelligence, business leaders and ethicists warn that unchecked adoption could deepen inequality and erode worker protections.
From transit hubs to neighbourhood networks, venture capital and government funding are reshaping how Canada's largest city operates-and attracting global tech talent to the process.
From King West to the emerging hubs of Liberty Village, local companies are unveiling ambitious product roadmaps that could reshape how millions work and live.
As the city pivots toward net-zero ambitions, experts warn that the transition risks creating new inequities while leaving critical supply-chain ethics unexamined.
As remote work settles into permanence, the city's unique blend of affordability, diversity, and collaborative spaces is reshaping how the world thinks about where innovation happens.
A surge in venture capital funding is transforming the Greater Toronto Area into a global hub for digital safety startups, with King West and the Waterfront Innovation District leading the charge.
From battery innovation to grid optimization, Toronto's distinctive blend of academic firepower, venture capital, and manufacturing heritage is reshaping the global green tech landscape.
As data breaches surge across Canada, local startups and established players reveal ambitious roadmaps for AI-powered protection, quantum-resistant encryption, and privacy-first architecture.
The city's venture capital ecosystem is booming, but founders and investors are grappling with sustainability, equity, and the human cost of chasing unicorns.
With over $2 billion in VC funding flowing into local artificial intelligence startups in the past 18 months, Toronto is cementing itself as a global AI powerhouse-and reshaping its business landscape in the process.
A Queen West-based company's AI platform is helping Toronto predict traffic patterns weeks in advance-and it's already saving the city millions in congestion costs.
The King West fintech is launching an automated tool that could save Canadian investors thousands in missed deductions-and it's already changing the competitive landscape.
A King West-based firm has cracked the code on using artificial intelligence to help small business owners compete with big-box retailers-and it's working.