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$80 Oil? $200 Oil? Insiders Talk Up Market With Dire Predictions Of Shortages

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With oil prices down 60 per cent since last summer, some industry insiders are trying to talk up the market by predicting wild price spikes to come, brought on by insufficient investment in oil production.

John Hofmeister, a former president of Royal Dutch Shell and head of the natural gas lobby group Citizens For Affordable Energy, is calling for $80-a-barrel oil by this summer.

But that’s peanuts compared to the predictions of Claudio Descalzi, head of the Italian energy company Eni Spa. He sees oil "maybe" hitting $200 a barrel within a few years.

Why? Because investment in oil production is collapsing, and it will take a long time to start up new projects if and when a supply crunch comes.

At the World Economic Forum, Descalzi predicted capital spending on oil would drop 10 to 13 per cent this year. And many new oil projects take five or six years to start producing, which means catching up when demand rises could be difficult.

“We can have a lack of production in four or five years creating a new increased oil price," he said.

Hofmeister argues that many of the world’s existing oil wells are at risk of “natural declines,” meaning that, without enough investment in new fields, the existing supply of oil will shrink as time goes on, putting upward pressure on prices.

While $200-a-barrel oil might seem like a dream right now to Canada’s struggling energy exporters, it's a scenario much of the world wants to avoid. It would likely mean economic devastation for oil-importing economies like that of the U.S. and China, and trouble for non-oil producing parts of Canada.

The closest the world ever got to $200 oil was around $140, in 2008 — just before the worst of the economic crisis of 2008-09. It’s hard to tell, though, how much oil contributed to the downturn, as the U.S.’s banking crisis was already underway at the time.

But it’s clear that, at $200, oil importers would start cutting back and accelerate efforts to switch to alternative energy sources. At those prices, alternative energies could take market share away from oil permanently. (This is why environmentalists like David Suzuki are unhappy about the oil slump — it’s slowing down the switch away from oil).

Of course, not everyone sees oil hitting levels that high, or even anytime. Most analysts (and Alberta Premier Jim Prentice) are predicting that oil prices will stay low for a prolonged period of time, as the world is dealing with a substantial oversupply problem.

And then there's Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin-Talal, the chairman of Kingdom Holdings, who says he doesn’t expect the price of oil to hit $100 — ever again.

Because of oversupply, getting oil back to even $60 or $70 will be "not that easy, not that quick," he said on CNBC Friday, a day after Saudi King Abdullah passed away.

Saudi Arabia is widely believed to be engaged in a war of attrition with the U.S.’s shale oil producers, which have exploded the global supply of oil over the past few years. Observers are waiting to see which oil producers will move first to cut back production.

So far, no one has, and analysts say it’s because oil producers are desperate not to lose market share to competitors.

Though Prince bin-Talal denies Saudi Arabia is trying to drive U.S. producers out of businesses, he admits "there's a game of who should cut production first" between OPEC countries and other producers.

"Eventually there's no doubt that some countries have to blink and reduce their production ... I don't see Saudi Arabia or the OPEC countries blinking," he said.

Many analysts note that production costs in Canada’s oilsands and U.S. shale fields are among the highest in the world, making them most likely to blink first.



Expedia Buys Travelocity In $280-Million Deal

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NEW YORK (AP) — Expedia has acquired travel booking site Travelocity from the Sabre Corp. for $280 million in cash.

The deal adds to Expedia's growing portfolio of websites. The Bellevue, Washington-company already owns nearly a dozen travel sites including Hotels.com, Hotwire and Egencia, the world's fifth-largest corporate travel management company.

Consumers shouldn't notice any change because of a deal already in place. Since 2013, Expedia Inc. has been powering Travelocity's U.S. and Canadian websites and providing Travelocity access to Expedia hotel supply and customer service program.

The move allows Sabre to focus more on its back-end system for selling airline tickets, hotel rooms and car rentals. Sabre is one of three global distribution system companies — along with Travelport and Amadeus — that handle sales for travel agencies and online booking sites like Expedia.

"Travelocity is one of the most recognized travel brands in North America, offering thousands of travel destinations to more than 20 million travellers per month,'' Dara Khosrowshahi, CEO of Expedia, Inc. said in a statement.

Expedia's shares rose $1.62, or 1.9 per cent, to $87.33 in midday trading Friday.

Competitor Orbitz Worldwide Inc. saw its stock price spike earlier this week on reports it is considering selling itself. Its shares rose 5 cents to $10.03 by midday Friday.

The other big travel booking is the Priceline Group, which owns sites like Priceline, Booking.com, Kayak and OpenTable.

While those companies dominate the travel market — and are taking advantage of quickly-growing markets in developing countries — they are facing new pressures at home from more-innovative sites like airfare search Hipmunk and last-minute deal site HotelTonight.

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Joe Oliver Says He Won't Meddle With Banks' Decisions On Rates

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OTTAWA - Federal Finance Minister Joe Oliver says he has no intention of pushing Canadian banks to follow the Bank of Canada's lead and drop their rates.

The central bank unexpectedly cut its trend-setting interest rate Wednesday to 0.75 per cent in response to the oil-price collapse.

Financial experts have said borrowers shouldn't automatically expect Canada's big banks to cut their prime rates just because the central bank decided to do so.

For his part, Oliver says he won't interfere with internal decisions of commercial banks.

He also says he has no current plans to introduce new rules for residential mortgages.

Oliver's approach differs from that of his predecessor, Jim Flaherty, who called the Bank of Montreal in 2013 to express his disapproval of its decision to offer a special low rate.

"I do not intend to interfere with the day-to-day operations of the banks," Oliver said in a statement Friday.

Cancelling Cable, Internet And Home Phone Service Just Got Easier

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Rejoice, cord-cutters and service-switchers: As of today, you are no longer required to give your telecom provider 30 days’ notice to cancel internet, cable or home phone services.

That’s thanks to a new rule from the CRTC that the telecom regulator announced last November. It comes into force Jan. 23, 2015.

“By prohibiting 30-day cancellation policies for television, Internet and telephone (including Voice over Internet Protocol) services, the CRTC has made it easier for individuals and small business customers to take advantage of a competitive marketplace by switching service providers,” the regulator said in a statement.

The CRTC had already put in place a similar rule for cellphone service, as part of its wireless code of conduct, which came into force in December of 2013.

It’s the first decision to come out of the regulator’s “Let’s Talk TV” project, in which the commission has been seeking out opinions from Canadians on how to move forward regulation of TV in the digital era.

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Deadmau5 Visits Tim Hortons Kitchen, Makes Very Deadmau5 Doughnuts

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Tim Hortons must have known what they were getting into when they allowed Canadian EDM superstar Deadmau5 into its test kitchen.

The producer and DJ looked like he had a delectable time as he created some Mau5-inspired concoctions on Thursday and posted pictures of them to social media.




Both Tim Hortons and Deadmau5's label, Universal Music Canada, also shared images of his creations.







This isn't the first time Tim Hortons and Deadmau5 have teamed up. Last spring, he asked the company to make a "Mau5head" doughnut. And they obliged.




Tim Hortons also benefitted from some cross-promotion on the DJ's "Coffee Run" video series, in which he grabs java from one of its restaurants with a celebrity in tow.

Stars he has taken on coffee runs include former Toronto mayor Rob Ford, singer Pharrell Williams and fellow producer Dillon Francis.

Deadmau5 and Tim Hortons' relationship doesn't have any paid sponsorship attached to it, Marketing Mag reported.

To that, Deadmau5 tweeted the following:




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Bombardier Lays Off 150 As Montreal Metro Production Halted

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MONTREAL — Bombardier is laying off about one-third of the 430 workers at its railway manufacturing plant in La Pocatiere, Que., for six months as it temporarily halts production of cars for the Montreal subway.

About 150 workers will be laid off at the end of April until the end of October because of late delivery of a key part from a supplier to its contract partner, Alstom.

Bombardier (TSX:BBD.B) has built 40 subway cars to date but can't complete them until it receives the part, an automated control system, from Ansaldo STS.

A Bombardier spokesman said the subway cars, which were scheduled to be delivered beginning in the second quarter of this year, will be delayed until the end of the year.

Marc Laforge says all 468 subway cars in its contract will be delivered as scheduled by the end of 2018.

Financial penalties for late delivery, which are spelled out in the contract, will be discussed with the Montreal transit authority, Alstom and Ansaldo.

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Charlotte McKinney, 'Next Kate Upton,' Appears In Carl's Jr. Super Bowl Ad

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A model who's been touted as the "next Kate Upton" appears in a steamy new Carl's Jr. Super Bowl commercial, um, just like, Kate Upton did.

Charlotte McKinney is the face of the fast food chain's new ad, titled "Au Naturel," in which she initially appears to be naked at a farmer's market.

But she later shows up in a bikini top and shorts, sensually mowing down on an "All-Natural Burger," which doesn't have any steroids, hormones or antibiotics – a "first" for the fast food industry, the company says.

"I love going au naturel," McKinney says. "It just makes me feel better."

McKinney, whom Fox411 labelled as the "next Upton" in September, resists the comparison.

"I'm my own person," she told the network. "I think we both have a different style of what we're going to do.

"I hope it's Charlotte McKinney and not the next Kate Upton."

It's difficult to avoid comparing the two, however. Upton herself once starred in a Carl's Jr. Super Bowl commercial that was banned from broadcast during the 2012 football championship, said ET Online.



According to USA Today, McKinney's commercial will only be seen in the western United States.

But media analysts have speculated over whether or not her commercial could be banned, too, reported The New York Daily News.

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Surrey, B.C. Named One Of World's Top 7 Intelligent Communities

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A Metro Vancouver city that is constantly battling an image problem received an ego boost this week when it was named one of the world's most intelligent communities.

The Intelligent Community Forum (ICF), a New York-based economic and social development think tank, released its "Top7 Intelligent Communities of 2015" list Thursday, and Surrey, B.C. made the cut.

"Surrey is a city in transition from a suburban past to a sustainable urban future," states ICF's profile of the city. "On this road, it seeks to leave behind a reputation for sprawl, crime and limited economic potential."

The organization cites Surrey's "smart-city systems," such as the My Surrey App, as well as its Innovation Boulevard project, "where the city, universities and business are building clusters in health technology, clean tech and advanced manufacturing," as some of the reasons for its high praise.

Each year the awards program centres around a theme on which to gauge the applicants, and 2015's is "The Revolutionary Community." Finalists, which were whittled down to 21 in October 2014, are chosen by a group of academic analysts.

Surrey is joined in the top seven by Arlington County, Va., Columbus in Ohio, Ipswich, Australia, Mitchell, S.D., New Taipei City, Taiwan, and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Each is now vying for the title of Intelligent Community of the Year, which will be announced at the ICF Summit in Toronto in June.

But even being a finalist is a welcome accolade for Surrey, a city that was most recently in the news thanks to an unflattering Facebook group.

Despite that, Surrey is working hard to change its reputation and is slowly growing into a sought-after place for real estate and business.

In May 2014 it was named the best B.C. city to invest in by the Real Estate Investment Network, and a recent luxury condo complex by WestStone Group has prices starting at an unbelievably low $93,900.

And who could forget Surrey's number one fan, Amrit Bains? The local resident wrote a song and shot a corresponding music video to share his city pride.

The ICF has been handing out the Intelligent Community awards since 1999. An organization press release states that locations in Canada and Taiwan regularly make the top seven list. Last year's number one spot was awarded to Toronto.

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Canadians Crying 'Fowl' Over Lack Of Ethnic Chicken, Document Shows

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OTTAWA - Some people have been crying foul over the lack of ethnic chicken in Canada.

Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz got an earful from customers who couldn't find particular poultry, a newly released document shows.

"Concerns about the availability of ethnic chicken have largely focused on supplies of specialty birds (e.g. chicken from the Silkie and Taiwanese breeds), kosher and Hong Kong chicken," the document says.

The Canadian Press obtained the four-page document under the Access to Information Act.

It says complaints flooded Ritz's office after the May 2013 closure of Toronto-based Chai Poultry, one of Canada's two suppliers of kosher chicken.

Chai Poultry sold its quota of chicken allocation to a halal processing plant based in the southern Ontario of town of Milton.

Under the country's supply-management system — which controls the production of cheese, dairy and poultry through marketing boards — farmers are allotted a certain quota, which they can sell. Foreign competition, meanwhile, is limited through the use of tariffs.

Chai Poultry's closure left only Montreal's Marvid Poultry to supply kosher chicken — which led to some of the grousing.

"These initial complaints related to limited supplies, poor quality and high prices arose when Toronto-based (blank) ceased operations in May 2013," says the document, in which Chai Poultry's name is censored.

Last April, the Chicken Farmers of Ontario issued a request for proposals for a new kosher-chicken processing plant. But it seems none of the companies that responded fit the bill.

"None of the five applications were found to meet (blank) requirements and the process continues to find a kosher supplier," the document says.

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada also got complaints in 2012 about an Ontario company's supply of Hong Kong chicken — birds that are processed with their heads and feet still attached, a style preferred by many Asian immigrants.

The company's name is blanked out in the copy of the document provided to The Canadian Press.

There haven't been any specific gripes about halal chicken. That's poultry Muslims are allowed to eat under Islamic law.

"There are ample supplies of halal chicken in the Canadian market," the document says.

In an emailed response, Agriculture Department spokesman James Watson would only say that "management of the supply of ethnic chicken remains the responsibility of provincial marketing boards."

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Federal Deficit Will Remain This Year If Oil Prices Stay This Low: PBO

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OTTAWA - Canada's parliamentary budget office says Ottawa's books will remain in the red in the coming fiscal year if battered oil prices continue to hover close to their current lows.

But the budget watchdog maintains the Harper government still has plenty of options to fulfil its long-held pledge to balance the budget in 2015-16.

The office released a new analysis Tuesday that predicts low oil prices will put the government on track to exhaust the $3-billion federal contingency reserve and run a deficit of $400 million in 2015-16. The calculations are based on a scenario where oil prices average US$48 per barrel for all of 2015.

The office also crunched numbers based on an average oil price of US$51 per barrel for 2015. In that scenario, the federal government would use up much of the contingency reserve and deliver a surplus of $700 million.

The PBO report comes as questions dog the federal government about whether it can still follow through on its vow to guide Canada's books back into the black — and if so, how it will pull it off.

The government recently took the rare step of delaying the release of its budget until at least April, so it could evaluate the impact of oil prices that have been cut by more than half since last summer.

Finance Minister Joe Oliver has insisted the government will produce a balanced budget for 2015-16, though he has acknowledged it may have to dip into the $3 billion reserve, which has been set aside for unforeseen circumstances.

Any unused money left in the reserve would be earmarked for debt reduction.

Jean-Denis Frechette, the parliamentary budget officer, said Tuesday that even with the impact of low oil prices, it's still feasible for the government to eliminate the deficit by 2015-16.

Frechette said the government has several options if it hopes to generate more revenue or trim its spending in the upcoming budget.

"It's not impossible to have a surplus for the 15-16 period," said Frechette, who noted even a small government deficit wouldn't cause economic problems.

"It's a decision for the government to take."

An official with the budget office gave examples how the government could achieve a balanced budget.

He said Ottawa holds shares in General Motors of Canada worth up to $5 billion, which could be sold off to generate more cash.

The official also said Ottawa could temporarily delay capital projects or could generate some accounting revenue by tweaking the government's long-term liabilities.

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Regina City Council Sheds Plan For First Strip Club

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REGINA - A packed public gallery gave a standing ovation when Regina city councillors voted to reject a proposal for the city's first strip club.

Council voted nine to one Monday night against an application from Edmonton businessman Bryon Gottfredsen to set up a club in a former bar.

The concept had previously been approved by the city's planning commission, following changes to provincial liquor laws.

Concerned citizens, members of church groups, a lawyer and even a member of the Saskatchewan Roughriders football club were among those who spoke against the application.

Shawn Fraser was the only councillor who voted for approval, saying they were dealing with a legal application.

Mayor Michael Fougere says council made the right decision.

Richard Lepp, who spent 27 years as a police officer in Saskatoon, spoke against the proposal. He said strip clubs bring with them the possibility of organized crime and human trafficking.

"My experience as a police officer in Saskatoon was that many of the women employed in these venues were managed, controlled, contract spot-and-sold by national networks," he said.

David Lee, a defensive end with the Roughriders, echoed Lepp's feelings.

"I'm strongly opposed to the commercial sexual use of women. Strip clubs often serve as a gateway into prostitution and human trafficking."

Another delegate, Emmanuel Sanchez, said "We need to be shown that women and men are not objects of sex."

Pastor Rick Parkyn said a strip club would do nothing to enhance the reputation and culture of Regina.

"I believe that this kind of proposed adult entertainment will open a Pandora's Box of undesirable activities," he told council.

Gottfredsen said after the meeting that he's disappointed with the outcome.

"I see it as a vocal minority, the people who showed up here today. I think that's why city council was forced to vote it down because nobody in favour stood up to say 'yes, let’s do it.' Maybe Regina just isn't ready for that style of entertainment."

Fraser said if anyone looks in the phone book or online they can likely find strippers.

"It shouldn't be a secret that this industry exists. We're not the gatekeepers to this happening in Regina," he said.

"I think this represents the general attitude of Regina residents because we had very few people say they wanted us to proceed with it," said the mayor.

Barge Craft Beer Drops Beer Store Legal Challenge

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Barge Craft Beer and Distribution, a Toronto-based startup and would-be rival to the Beer Store, has announced it has withdrawn its application to challenge a post-Prohibition era law that gives a consortium of foreign-owned breweries de facto control over 80 per cent of Ontario's $3 billion beer retail market. 


Less than two weeks ago, Barge's owner and chief legal counsel Michael Hassell, promised to "Barge in ON" the province's beer sales by launching an unprecedented legal challenge to an almost 90-year-old provincial law that allows the Beer Store to be the only private retailer in the province that can sell beer without first having to brew it on-site. 


Now, it seems that challenge has stumbled even before it left the gate. 


"Barge has obtained an external and expert legal opinion on the proposed court application," a statement on Barge's website reads.


"The court application has a low chance of success and would be extremely expensive. For these reasons, Barge has decided not to proceed. It would be unreasonable to ask people to fund a losing, expensive battle," the statement said.



Hassell had said his proposed legal challenge would have sought to give equal opportunity to any private retailer with a license looking to sell beer responsibly, including corner stores. 


His argument hinged on a section of the provincial Liquor Act, which dates back to the post-Prohibition era, that he says no longer reflects the times. 


When the law was first enacted in 1927, the Beer Store, or Brewer's Retail as it was known then, was a small cooperative of provincial-based breweries, Hassell said. 


In the almost 90 years since, those breweries have consolidated into a consortium of three foreign-owned corporations, U.S.-owned Molson-Coors, Japanese-owned Sapporo, and Brazilian-owned Anheuser-Busch-InBev, all multinationals that own the vast majority of the Beer Store's shares.

Target Canada's Employee Fund: Some Get 'Severance' Pay, Some Have To Keep Working

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It turns out Target’s employee trust for its 17,600 laid-off Canadian workers isn’t much of a severance package for those who have to work throughout the chain's full 16-week wind-down period.

Target CEO Brian Cornell unveiled the $70-million trust, to be kept separate from what it owes creditors, when the retailer’s Canadian subsidiary announced its decision to file for creditor protection and pull out of Canada, closing all 133 stores in the country.

“We knew that this decision would have an impact on each and every team member and ensuring that we treated them fairly was particularly important to me,” Cornell said on an internal blog on Jan. 15.

“Therefore, in what we believe is an unprecedented move, Target Corp. is voluntarily seeking to establish a trust that we will fund with C$70 million. Those funds are designed to provide nearly all Target Canada employees with a minimum of 16 weeks of wages and benefits coverage during the wind-down period.”

However, the trust may be a little less altruistic than it first appeared. At least some of that $70 million set aside is for regular employee pay.

Workers who are let go before the end of the wind-down period will continue to be paid, effectively receiving “severance” pay equal to the average hourly wage they had been earning. However, if employees are needed for the whole period, they’ll work as usual, and will receive no additional severance pay. If an employee quits or finds a new job during that time, they get nothing additional.

Target spokeswoman Molly Snyder confirmed the details of an apparent leaked FAQ for employees that was posted online.

“If your last day is this Friday and you work through this Friday, you will continue to be compensated up through that 16 week period. If you are needed for the full 16 weeks, then we’ll provide the compensation for the full 16 weeks as well,” Snyder said.

Snyder said Target does not yet know how many employees will be needed through the entire wind-down period.

“Team members will receive written notification of their separation date, which will generally be at least 16 weeks after the notice,” the alleged internal document reads.

“At some point prior to the end of the notice period, Target Canada may determine that your services are no longer needed and ask you not to come into work. If this is the case you will be eligible to receive your pay and benefit coverage through the notice period, as funded by an Employee Trust the Target Corporation has set up.”

The 16-week wind down period started Jan. 25, Snyder said, and liquidation will begin in the next few weeks, likely early February. For most employees working in the head office, the last day was Jan. 23.

Earlier on HuffPost:

Toronto And Montreal Are The Best Cities To Live In, According To The Economist

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Toronto and Montreal might have a longtime rivalry, but one thing is for sure — they are both incredible places to live.

The Economist's Intelligence Unit (EIU) Safe Index 2015 released on Monday, which rates the safety of major cities all over the world, placed Toronto in eighth for its safety measures (and first for North America), while Montreal came in fourteenth. But when it came to looking at where the best place to live overall were, Toronto was on top, and Montreal came in second place.

As the study explains, "Deciding where to live is a personal choice for many city residents. For some, safety will be paramount. Others will prioritise culture and creativity. Two neighbours may hold opposite views on democracy and the cost of living."

While the safety index looks at the five factors of digital security, health security, infrastructure and personal safety, the measure of where to live is based on EIU's other studies as well, including liveability rankings, worldwide cost of living, business environment rankings, democracy index and global food security.

The safest city overall was Tokyo, thanks to its score in digital security, which takes into account how often identity theft occurs, the security of digital technology and other factors. As well, despite having the world's largest urban population, Tokyo also came in third for personal safety, after Singapore and Osaka.

Vancouver, which has ranked highly in many city studies over the past few years, including global reputation, did not appear on the EIU's list. Scandinavian cities, which generally take the top spots on lists, are also missing, apparently thanks to their high cost of living.

Take a look at where The Economist says are the best places in the world to live (according to their criteria) right now:

GoDaddy's Super Bowl Puppy Commercial Pulled After Criticism (TWEETS)

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All is fair in the world of Super Bowl commercials, but there's one thing you don't mess with: puppies.

Web hosting company GoDaddy found out the hard way, after it decided to pull a commercial which critics say promotes the use of illegal puppy mills, according to USA Today.

The commercial stars Buddy, a Golden Retriever puppy, who falls off a truck on the way home, but reunites with his owner after a long journey. Sounds sweet, right? Well, not for long. Buddy's owner turns out to be a breeder who sells him using a website she created through GoDaddy.

According to Time magazine, the commercial is meant to parody Budweiser's famous #bestbuds commercials, but animal lovers and advocates aren't finding it funny. Critics sounded off on social media after GoDaddy released its Super Bowl commercial Tuesday.










While some clearly aren't happy with the commercial, other's were more accepting of the company's dark humour.







Following the criticism, GoDaddy CEO Blake Irving announced in a blog post that the ad will no longer air, saying the company "underestimated the emotional response" people had. Irving maintains his company will still be in the Super Bowl but didn't elaborate on what that meant.

He also explained that Buddy came from a reputable breeder in California and has since been adopted by one of the company's employees.

Do you think this commercial crosses a line? Watch it above and tell us what you think.

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Top 10 Signs Your Car Needs Repair

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Cars are complex machines which we rely on, but few things are as frustrating as experiencing unexpected car trouble when they fail us. If you've ever had a car leave you stranded, you know exactly what we mean. While it's usually best to leave auto repairs and troubleshooting to a professional mechanic, there are many common car problems you can actually avoid or anticipate yourself based on our list of Top 10 Signs Your Car Needs Repair.

NAFTA Environment Watchdog Won't Probe Oilsands

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The three countries that run the North American Free Trade Agreement's environmental watchdog have voted against an investigation into how Canada oversees Alberta's oilsands.

The unanimous decision by Canada, Mexico and the United States comes despite recommendations from staff at the Commission on Environmental Co-operation. They had concluded there were enough questions about how environmental rules are enforced on oilsands tailings ponds to justify an investigation.

The commission was created in 1995 to win environmental support for NAFTA by providing a safeguard that the deal wouldn't boost commerce at the expense of clean air, water or land. Commission staff investigate public complaints that Canada, the United States or Mexico aren't living up to their laws and recommend a "factual record" if they find enough grounds.

In 2010, a number of individuals and environmental groups filed a complaint with the commission that Canada wasn't upholding its Fisheries Act. They pointed to research that suggests an unknown amount of tailings from the oilsands are seeping into groundwater and damaging fish habitat.

Last August, the commission's legal staff decided there was enough supporting evidence to recommend an investigation.

But Canada did not respond to the allegations. The government pointed to commission rules that say it's not allowed to review any issue currently before the courts and a man from Fort McMurray, Alta., had filed a legal action that levelled similar criticisms about the tailings ponds.

That action had been heard in February and the man confirmed to The Canadian Press that he considered the matter closed. The appeal period ended last fall.

Still, Canada argued that commission staff have no independent power to determine whether the case was active or relevant. The government's word should have been enough to block the investigation, it said.

"(Staff) should have proceeded no further in its analysis and terminated the submission."

However, a statement from the United States suggests that country would be open to reconsidering the request now that the legal action is officially over.

"Nothing in the (North American Agreement on Environmental Co-operation) would have precluded the submitters from filing another submission on these issues," it said.

It's the second time in two months environmentalists have lost bids to begin investigations into Canada's activities.

In December, Canada used a similar argument to team up with Mexico and defeat a motion to look into salmon farms along the British Columbia coast.

Environmental groups and First Nations had accused Canada of violating its own laws by allowing the fish farms, which they said harm wild salmon stocks by spreading parasites.

The commission's internal staff had recommended an investigation be done. But Canada won the vote by arguing the issue was already the subject of a court proceeding in B.C.

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Rick Mercer Rant: Joe Oliver's Brain ‘Melting In Full-Blown Panic'

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Like many people these days, Rick Mercer is confused about the state of the economy. But one thing he’s not confused about is why the Harper government is delaying its spring budget: Oil price panic.

“You know why there’s no budget? Because behind the dull eyes of the Finance Minister is a brain melting in full blown panic,” Mercer said in his latest rant, referring to Finance Minister Joe Oliver, who delayed the delivery of the budget to April officially over uncertainty about the impact of falling oil prices.

And the host of CBC’s Rick Mercer Report can’t get over how quickly the Harper government refocused to other priorities once oil prices came down.

“Five minutes ago the government was crystal clear—it was all about the oil. ... If anyone dared suggest that our economy was too dependent on oil, they were nothing less than an enemy of the state,” Mercer said.

“And now the price of oil has tanked, the world is dumping our currency and the Prime Minister is showing up in Ontario of all places talking about manufacturing. … Give him another week, he’ll be admitting he was born and raised in Toronto.”

The Harper government has indeed made manufacturing a new priority, and, with an election looming, Prime Minister Stephen Harper has been at odds with Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau over who’s more focused on central Canada’s long-struggling manufacturing sector.

Mercer ends his rant with an appeal to all Canadians to remember that “we will get through this together. … As sure as the sun will rise, the sun will set, and there are very expensive commercials on TV paid for by us, telling us, wait for it, our economy is the envy of the world.”

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Cyber surveillance worries most Canadians: privacy czar's poll

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A growing number of Canadians say they are concerned about privacy, according to a new survey commissioned by the federal privacy commissioner.


The Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada released a survey of over 1,500 people on Wednesday, as Canadians were learning more about how their country's electronic spy agency is conducting mass surveillance of internet downloads.


A document obtained by U.S. whistleblower Edward Snowden reveals Canada's Communications Security Establishment (CSE) is surveying 102 file-sharing sites across the globe in its search for extremists.


According to the document, that task requires CSE to sift through millions of uploads and downloads of movies, photos, music and other files every day.


The poll, commissioned by the privacy commissioner's office and conducted this past fall, indicates nine in 10 Canadians have "some level of concern" about privacy.


About one in three, or 34 per cent, of those surveyed said they were "extremely concerned," up from 25 per cent from 2012.


“Canadians deeply value privacy, but fear they are losing the control they have over their personal information. It’s imperative we find ways to enhance that sense of control so that people feel their privacy rights are being respected,” the privacy commissioner's office said in a statement.


Among the findings:


- Seventy-three per cent feel they have less protection of their personal information in their daily lives — the highest level in a decade.

- Seventy-eight per cent expressed concern about how personal information about them that ends up online might be used in the context of government surveillance.

- Fifty-seven per cent said they were “not comfortable” with government departments and agencies requesting personal information from telecommunications companies without a warrant.

- Sixty per cent said they have little expectation of privacy today, either online or in the real world because there are so many ways in which their privacy can be compromised.

Phoenix Strategic Perspectives Inc., interviewed 1,519 Canadians by phone for the poll, which has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.


The survey was conducted in October and November 2014.


CSE told CBC News it's "legally authorized to collect and analyze metadata, including from parts of the internet routinely used by terrorists."


The agency said it's looking to identify foreign threats to Canada.


"In collecting the analyzing metadata, CSE does not direct its activities at Canadians or anyone in Canada, and in accordance with our legislation, has a range of measures in place to protect the privacy of Canadians incidentally encountered in the course of these foreign intelligence operations," CSE said.


In its analysis of the CSE project, dubbed "Levitation," the U.S. news website The Intercept said the world's intelligence agencies are operating like "a giant X-ray machine over all our digital lives.”


"The scale of it is really mind-boggling," David Christopher of the internet advocacy group OpenMedia told CBC News.


"We’ve also seen Canadian internet addresses are among the targets, he said, "that [CSE] is actually sharing these IP addresses with spies in the U.K. and U.S."


On mobile? Click here for Levitation file



On mobile? Click here for CSE response

Quebec judge rejects challenge by merchants fined for violating sign law

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MONTREAL - A Quebec judge has rejected a legal challenge by about two dozen businesses that were prosecuted for not respecting the province's French Language Charter.

The anglophone merchants operate businesses in and around the Montreal area and were charged with violating the sign provisions of the law, better known as Bill 101.

The law requires the marked predominance of French on public signs, posters and packaging. It also applies to Internet postings.

One of the defendants' main arguments was that the French language is no longer threatened.

The companies also argued the sign law violated their freedom of expression as English-speaking citizens.

But in a 69-page ruling today, Quebec court Judge Salvatore Mascia dismissed the challenge, ruling the defendants did not show the situation of the French language had changed significantly.

All but one of the 24 businesses have been found guilty of violating Bill 101.

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