Inside the Raptors' front office war room as they selected Allen Graves with the 19th pick on Open Gym
"The only fun one I think if you put CMB and Graves in, are they going to be a fun duo off the bench? Especially with Shead. I think it fits our current philosophy."
A Montreal court case is revealing how Tim Hortons really operates, and some of what's inside is worth knowing.
Ian Austen of the New York Times has the details. 🧵👇 (1/6)
Co-Founder of a16z (the biggest VC fund in the world) Marc Andreessen:
"People who want to build their careers should be spending every spare hour talking to AI: alright, train me up"
He says this is the habit that separates who gets paid and who gets replaced
In 1 hour 44 minutes, he explains why the people winning right now are training themselves on AI every spare hour
Open the model Ask it to teach you Practice Ask again Repeat daily
That is the new career ladder
Bookmark and watch the interview
🚨 CEO of Nvidia: "I'd hire the graduate who's expert in AI over the one who isn't. Every time"
he's not talking about people who use AI
everyone uses AI.
he's talking about people who know the stack.
agents. frameworks. tools. workflows. skills. automations
Bookmark it.
The most valuable skill sets on the planet right now:
1. people who can set up agents properly, manage them, and run local AI models
2. marketers who know how to build distribution
3. robotics engineers who can do all three: build the hardware, wire in the AI, and source manufacturing etc
4. curators who are good at yapping and can do short form video in their sleep
5. the builder-distributor. The one person who can both ship the product AND get it in front of people
6. IRL community builders
INSTEAD OF WATCHING NETFLIX TONIGHT.
Spend 1 hour with this.
Claude AI FULL COURSE that teaches you how to BUILD and AUTOMATE anything.
The people who watch this tonight will wake up tomorrow with a new skill.
Watch it and Bookmark it now.
Today, on my final day as Director of National Intelligence, I’m releasing never-before-seen communications and documents exposing how Dr. Fauci provided millions in US taxpayer dollars to fund dangerous gain-of-function research at the Wuhan lab, worked with politicized elements within the Intelligence Community to suppress the truth about his actions and hide the virus’ lab-leak origins, and lied to Congress while under oath in 2024. It’s time you know the truth.
https://t.co/3YJSstB7d4
INSTEAD OF WATCHING NETFLIX TONIGHT. Spend 2 hour with this. Claude AI FULL COURSE that teaches you how to BUILD and AUTOMATE anything. The people who watch this tonight will wake up tomorrow with a new skill. Watch it and bookmark it now.
Google CEO, Sundar Pichai:
"If you don't learn to how to orchestrate agents now, you'll spend 2027 catching up to people who started today"
In 30 minutes he explains why the best engineers stopped writing code and started building agents.
Most people think building an agent requires an engineering degree.
It doesn't. It requires one guide and one afternoon.
Watch the interview, then save the exact setup below 👇
NVIDIA CEO, Jensen Huang:
"Nobody writes prompts anymore. The new job is to write and handle loops."
He calls it the shift that defines the rest of 2026.
Interview was out just yesterday.
Watch the 23 minute talk, then save the full framework below👇
Anthropic CEO:
"If my revenue is not $1 trillion, even $800 billion,
there's no force on earth, no hedge on earth,
that could stop me from going bankrupt."
In a 3-hour podcast, Dario Amodei does the math on his own bankruptcy.
Revenue 10x a year.
90% of code written by the model.
A country of geniuses by 2028.
He can't tell you if it ends in trillions or zero.
The most honest voice in AI, or the biggest bubble admitting it?
Tech companies on Bill C-22
• Shopify @Shopify CEO Tobi Lütke @tobi warned that Bill C-22 could become a “death blow to Canadian tech viability” and make Canada “essentially unviable for those with choices on where to build.”
• Signal's @signalapp VP of Strategy & Global Affairs Udbhav Tiwari stated, "In its current form, Bill C-22 would convert the everyday tools Canadians rely on into a sprawling, insecure surveillance apparatus."
• Apple @Apple Senior Director of User Privacy & Child Safety Erik Neuenschwander warned that Bill C-22 allows the Government of Canada to force companies to break encryption by inserting backdoors into their products - “something Apple will never do.”
• Google's @Google Director of Government Affairs and Public Policy Jeanette Patell warned that Bill C-22 “goes well beyond lawful access regimes in other G7 democracies, and risks creating new surveillance infrastructure that would introduce serious security vulnerabilities, undermine user trust and hinder our ability to innovate and offer pro-privacy technologies.”
• Meta @Meta warned that Bill C-22 could require companies to build or maintain capabilities that weaken encryption and that could force providers to "install government spyware directly on their systems."
• Proton VPN @ProtonVPN General Manager David Peterson warned that complying with Bill C-22 could conflict with Swiss and European privacy obligations. He said, “Complying with foreign surveillance orders without Swiss legal process is a criminal offence...We’ll defend our Canadian users and never compromise them.”
• NordVPN @NordVPN stated that “there isn’t a scenario in which we would compromise our no-logs architecture or encryption protections" and that it would consider limiting or removing its Canadian presence.
• ExpressVPN @expressvpn warned, “Legislation that mandates data retention or technical access, however well-intentioned, undermines the security that millions of users rely on."
• DuckDuckGo @DuckDuckGo stated that "if the bill passes, we will be forced to stop offering our VPN in Canada."
• Windscribe @windscribecom stated, “...they want to destroy the entire essence of our service to basically spy on its own citizens."
Privacy protects citizens. It also protects innovation.
Note: These statements were made before Bill C-22 was amended on June 18, 2026. In our view, those amendments did not meaningfully address concerns raised by tech companies, privacy experts, or civil liberties organizations. The companies above are free to tell Canadians whether the amendments have changed their assessment.