As the city's tech sector booms, security experts and ethicists grapple with the uncomfortable truth that safeguarding data often means surrendering it.
As the city races to embed sensors and AI across neighbourhoods from Waterfront to Scarborough, experts warn that digital transformation without guardrails risks deepening inequality and eroding public trust.
From banking on King West to dating apps in the Distillery District, encryption and privacy tools are becoming invisible necessities-and expensive luxuries-for Torontonians navigating an increasingly hostile digital landscape.
Solar panels on Leslieville rooftops and electric buses on King Street West signal a sustainability shift that's affecting everything from electricity bills to transit commutes.
From instant peer-to-peer transfers to AI-powered budgeting, digital financial tools are fundamentally changing how everyday Torontonians earn, spend, and save.
As venture capital floods into the city's startup scene, founders and investors grapple with questions about who gets funded, whose values drive innovation, and whether growth always means progress.
From King West to the Beaches, flexible work platforms are fundamentally changing commute times, neighbourhood economies, and where Torontonians choose to live.
From King West to MaRS, local tech firms are racing to launch autonomous tools and industry-specific applications that could reshape how Canadian businesses operate.
A rare combination of municipal ambition, venture capital proximity, and civic pragmatism is making Toronto's smart city transformation distinctly different from rivals.
A King West-based firm's predictive quality-control system is helping Ontario's small and mid-sized factories reduce waste by up to 40 percent-and drawing attention from across North America.
As AI investment reshapes the city's innovation landscape, workers must adapt their skills and expectations-here's the insider guide to landing roles in Canada's fastest-moving tech market.
Unlike Silicon Valley's venture-first model, Canada's largest city is building digital transformation through cross-sector collaboration and public-private pragmatism.
A combination of talent density, regulatory pragmatism, and cross-sector collaboration is positioning Toronto as a distinctly different kind of innovation hub.
As the city's financial tech sector doubles down on disruption, experts warn that speed-to-market culture is outpacing safeguards for consumers and the economy.
From King West to the Waterfront, Toronto has engineered something Silicon Valley struggles to replicate: a deeply interconnected ecosystem where talent, capital, and cultural diversity fuel innovation.