FlixHQ is free tv shows streaming website with zero ads, it allows you watch tv shows online, watch tv shows online free in high quality for free. You can also download full tv shows and watch it later if you want.
In 2022, as part of, Block Hate: Building Resilience against Online Hate Speech, YWCA Canada commissioned national surveys and convened focus groups to discuss individual and collective experiences of online hate across Canada, and develop community-generated, survivor-centric solutions to curb the circulation of digital hate and mitigate its harms.
We learnt that 83% of women and gender-diverse people in Canada have witnessed online hate in the past 24 months. We also learnt that people who identify as living with disabilities, Indigenous, 2SLGBTQI and Black are disproportionately more likely to be targeted online.
In the first of an ongoing series, Ashleigh Rae-Thomas, an Afro-Caribbean writer, facilitator, and avid community organizer from Toronto, by way of Jamaican roots, shares her experience of being targeted by racist and sexist online hate.
The overall objective of this project is to improve community resilience by developing technological intervention tools to prevent, address and report online hate speech through community-based research.
On March 21, 2020, International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, we launched #BlockHate, a national social media campaign with the Canadian Race Relations Foundation (CRRF) to address concerns around the rise of hate speech and racism online. The campaign features women of colour targeted by online hate through social media who share their experiences.
Women working in professions involving a public online presence such as politicians, artists, journalists and defenders of human rights and gender equality are particularly targeted by coordinated campaigns of online gendered disinformation, harassment, hate speech or even death and rape threats.
AI and machine learning models are providing some solutions to recognize hate speech and toxic speech characteristic of online gendered disinformation campaigns. There are, however, shortcomings inherent in pure AI based models. Human review alongside the use of algorithmic tools to detect violent content targeting women and girls in all their diversity will be necessary to reverse gender biases and stereotypes and take into account cultural and linguistic contexts and nuances.
Are there any blackouts?
Rogers is promising fewer blackouts, with a few catches. One example given during the news conference on Wednesday: A fan in Burnaby, B.C., who follows the Canucks was unable to watch local regional games last year. This season, if that fan already subscribes to Rogers Sportsnet, they would be able to stream every Canucks game online. Another catch is that Rogers does not own exclusive regional rights to every Canadian team, so the same would not apply to, say, fans in Toronto, where TSN still holds regional rights to the Maple Leafs. (Rogers would be able to lift the local regional blackouts for its 16 games.). TSN owns the regional rights in Winnipeg and Ottawa, meaning GameCentre blackouts would not be lifted for those in-market games.