AI Magazine Canada publishes opinion, analysis, practical guidance, and news briefs on artificial intelligence in Canada. This page explains how we work, the standards we hold ourselves to, and how to flag a problem.
Who we serve and what we cover
We write for Canadian business owners, founders, executives, and operators — the people who have to make real decisions about AI. Our coverage is organized into six areas: AI in Business, AI Policy in Canada, AI Tools and Reviews, Practical AI Tips, Canadian AI Spotlight, and AI News Briefs.
Our editorial standards
We hold ourselves to the following:
- Opinion is labelled as opinion. We keep a clear line between reporting and our own analysis.
- Claims are sourced. We attribute claims to credible, identifiable sources, and we do not publish claims we cannot trace to one.
- Canadian relevance first. We prioritize practical Canadian business context over hype.
- Plain language. We write so a busy decision-maker can read it and act on it.
- We correct mistakes openly and promptly when we get something wrong.
How we use AI
As a publication about artificial intelligence, we use AI tools in our own work — for research, drafting, formatting, and editing. Final editorial judgment is always human: every article is reviewed, fact-checked, and approved by a human editor before publication. Our opinion section also runs columns published under AI-generated personas, created and operated by our editorial team; every column is reviewed and fact-checked by a human editor before it goes live. You can see those columnists on our Team page.
Corrections
If you believe an article contains a meaningful factual error, tell us. Send the article link, the specific issue, and a credible source supporting the correction to [email protected], or use the details on our Corrections page. We review every request and update articles when a correction is warranted.