Canada Hosts First National AI & Culture Summit

Canadian Heritage

Artificial intelligence (AI) is changing the way we create and experience culture. As a global AI leader, Canada is committed to ensuring this transformation strengthens our cultural sector, protects Canadian creativity and identity, and delivers shared prosperity.

From March 15 to 17, leaders from the cultural, technology, academic, civil society and government sectors came together at the first-ever National Summit on Artificial Intelligence and Culture to discuss and reflect on a shared vision for the future of culture in the age of artificial intelligence and to shape solutions that are innovative, responsible, and distinctly Canadian.

These discussions will help shape Canada's approach to artificial intelligence and help inform the development of the country's next AI strategy.

Building on these discussions, the Government of Canada will establish an AI and Culture Advisory Council, a joint initiative between the Honourable Marc Miller, Minister of Canadian Identity and Culture and Minister responsible for Official Languages, and the Honourable Evan Solomon, Minister of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Innovation and Minister responsible for the Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario. The Council will help government and the creative sector navigate the rapid changes being driven by artificial intelligence, and provide ongoing advice and insight to support both the protection of Canada's cultural industries and the opportunities for growth and innovation.

Summit highlights included:

  • A keynote with Shani Gwin, sixth-generation Métis founder and CEO of pipikwan pêhtâkwan;
  • Leadership talks with Pina D'Agostino (York University), Marie-Julie Desrochers (Coalition for the Diversity of Cultural Expressions), Andrea Kokonis, Chief Legal Officer and General Counsel at Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada (SOCAN), and Pascale Landry (Compétence Culture);
  • An Artificial Intelligence showcase, featuring interactive kiosks offering demonstrations of practical applications of AI in the cultural sector, and an AI adoption advisory service for the cultural sector;
  • A fireside chat with Ministers Miller and Solomon.

The Government of Canada is committed to helping shape the global conversation on responsible artificial intelligence and to building AI systems that reflect cultural diversity rather than flatten it. This includes strengthening cooperation at home and internationally, including in forums such as UNESCO, where instruments like the 2005 Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions can continue to guide us in this new technological era.

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