Shane Hewitt and The Nightshift

NEW - AI and Humans in the Loop: Who's Actually Watching?

10 min · 23. maj 2026
episode NEW - AI and Humans in the Loop: Who's Actually Watching? cover

Beskrivelse

Humans in the loop only works as a safeguard if the humans know they are in one. Right now, across industries, most of them do not. Mohit Rajhans points to a coffee chain that pulled its AI automation entirely after customers got wrong information because no one was checking the inventory. That is not a fringe failure. Businesses are deploying AI faster than they are training the people responsible for it. Tech workers have been getting laid off recently after spending months teaching AI systems everything those systems now know. The question Rajhans is asking is a hard one: how do you stay irreplaceable when you did not even know you were being replaced? Topics: humans in the loop, AI accountability, AI oversight, tech layoffs, AI automation GUEST: Mohit Rajhans | http://thinkstart.ca [http://thinkstart.ca] Originally aired on 2026-05-22

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episode SHIFTHEADS: West End Ottawa Born and Raised. What’s On Your Mind Stefan Keyes? cover

SHIFTHEADS: West End Ottawa Born and Raised. What’s On Your Mind Stefan Keyes?

Ottawa nostalgia and urban development collide when the place that held your childhood firsts starts coming down by machine. Stefan Keyes grew up in Ottawa's West End, close enough to walk to Westgate Shopping Centre. He watched his first movie there. He got his first passport photo there. He has not been inside in years and he is going to miss it anyway.   There is a difference between a place you visit and a place that holds something for you. Stefan Keyes names it precisely: the physical manifestation of memory. When it goes, the instant recall goes with it.   The new Ottawa is bigger, shinier, and genuinely exciting. It is also missing something that the reclining seats and the VIP section cannot replace.   Topics: Westgate Shopping Centre Ottawa, nostalgia urban development, childhood memories Ottawa West End, human connection, Stefan Keyes CTV CFRA   GUEST: Stefan Keyes | cfra.com Originally aired on 2026-06-02

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episode Good News Tuesday: She Fixed Bikes for 14 Years and Gave Every One Away cover

Good News Tuesday: She Fixed Bikes for 14 Years and Gave Every One Away

Good news Tuesday Canada brings Krista Richard out of Moncton, New Brunswick, where her Bikes and Trikes for Everyone program has put wheels under thousands of kids over 14 years. She collects them, fixes them, and sends them out the door. That is the whole program.   The phones and texts fill in the rest. Arthur was fancy. Teletubbies was a hard no. Someone watched Mr. Dressup through their teens when they were homesick and it still worked. A daughter got her physics project running tonight. The good news is small and enormous all at once.   In New York City, a Turkish restaurant owner has been letting homeless people sleep inside for eight years. Pope Leo plays tennis. The good news is not hard to find once you start looking.   Topics: good news Tuesday Canada, Krista Richard Bikes and Trikes Moncton, childhood TV nostalgia, Pope Leo Augustinian, listener texts radio Originally aired on 2026-06-02

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episode NEW - New Fiction Book: The Peacekeeper Who Couldn't Keep His Own Peace cover

NEW - New Fiction Book: The Peacekeeper Who Couldn't Keep His Own Peace

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episode ICYMI - Canada's Been in a Recession for a Decade. Immigration Hid It. cover

ICYMI - Canada's Been in a Recession for a Decade. Immigration Hid It.

Canada is technically in a recession and the prime minister won't say the word. Matt Gurney thinks the more important conversation is the one hiding underneath it. For years, the answer to flat economic productivity was simple: put more people in the country. More people at Tim Hortons, more people at Canadian Tire, more dollars tallied in GDP. It worked as a number. It did not work as an economy. Canadian productivity per working hour has been declining relative to the United States for decades, and the gap keeps widening. Now the population is actually dipping, the tariff pressure is real, and the mask is off. Gurney's read on Mark Carney: he knows what the big picture problems are and he's trying to put the country on a different economic track without touching the social policies that keep his party together. Whether you can draw a clean line between economic and social issues is another question. And it's been more than a year. The steering wheel might be broken, or the ship just takes this long to turn. Either way, Canadians aren't asking for a Hail Mary. They want a yard. Topics: Canada recession 2025, Canadian productivity decline, GDP population growth, Mark Carney economic policy, immigration and GDP Canada GUEST: Matt Gurney | http://readtheline.ca [http://readtheline.ca] Originally aired on 2026-06-02

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