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Local news from Fort St. John, Taylor, Fort Nelson, Dawson Creek and the rest of Northeast B.C. Energeticcity.ca is your source for news and events! We are the only local news source with full-time staff working in Fort St. John.

Bob Zimmer re-elected MP in Prince George-Peace River-Northern Rockies

We project that Bob Zimmer will keep is title as MP following the results from Elections Canada. Conservative Candidate and incumbent MP Bob Zimmer has been re-elected to the Prince George-Peace River-Northern Rockies riding. Zimmer was running against NDP candidate Kathi Dickie, Elizabeth Biggar of the Green Party, Progressive Party of Canada’s Barry Blackman, Liberal […]

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Third girl dies after being buried in truckload of canola on central Alberta farm

ROCKY MOUNTAIN HOUSE, Alta. — RCMP say a third girl has died in a central Alberta farm accident that buried her and two other girls in a truckload of canola.

The girl had been airlifted to a hospital in Edmonton after the accident at a family farm near Withrow on Tuesday night.

Rocky Mountain House RCMP said that the three were playing on a loaded truck of canola, became buried by the seed and suffocated.

EMS officials say ambulance personnel determined the girls had been inside the truck while it was being filled from a hopper, but it was unclear how they became submerged underneath the seed.

They were pulled out by adults, who called for help, but despite the efforts of emergency workers, an 11-year-old and a 13-year-old died.

Another 11-year-old girl was transported via air ambulance in critical condition to the Stollery Children's Hospital and later died.

There are media reports that the three girls were sisters.

RCMP say life-saving measures were attempted at length by personnel from several community fire departments, the ambulance service and RCMP members.

The Rocky Mountain House Victims Service Unit was assisting the family.

— With files from CTV Calgary

The Canadian Press

Shafia father, mother and son ask Ontario Court of Appeal for new trials

TORONTO — A father, mother and their son, all convicted of first-degree murder in the deaths of four members of their family, are asking Ontario's highest court for new trials.

In documents filed with the Ontario Court of Appeal, Mohammad Shafia, his wife Tooba Yahya and their son Hamed argue, among other issues, that their trial judge should not have admitted evidence from an expert on so-called honour killings.

The three were convicted in January 2012 of four counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of daughters Zainab, 19, Sahar, 17, and Geeti, 13, and Mohammad Shafia's first wife in a polygamous marriage, fifty-two-year-old Rona Amir Mohammad.

The victims' bodies were found on June 30, 2009, in a car at the bottom of a canal in Kingston, Ont.

The Crown at the trial asserted the murders were committed after the girls shamed the family by dating and acting out, and Amir Mohammad was simply disposed of.

The trial judge described the killings as being motivated by the Shafias' "twisted concept of honour." 

 

The Canadian Press

Blue Jays’ post-season run helps them close in on Maple Leafs’ online popularity

TORONTO — The Toronto Blue Jays' success on the field is helping them online.

Toronto's surge into Major League Baseball's post-season and performance in the American League Division Series has seen the Blue Jays' popularity explode, with the team's official Twitter account gaining over 350,000 followers in the past 10 weeks and putting them over one million total followers.

"We do see these kinds of spikes in sports around a team or athlete when they're winning," said Christopher Doyle, director of media partnerships for Twitter Canada. "We see it in the Stanley Cup playoffs. A couple of seasons ago the Montreal Canadiens saw a surge in Twitter followers and almost caught up to the Maple Leafs, at that point, because of their playoff run.

"A playoff run can really galvanize a fanbase."

The Toronto Maple Leafs remain the most popular Canadian sports franchise on Twitter, but may soon fall to the Blue Jays. The Maple Leafs had 1,034,103 followers and the Blue Jays had 1,030,844 as of Tuesday night — a difference of just 3,259 — ahead of Game 5 of the ALDS between the Blue Jays and Texas Rangers on Wednesday afternoon.

Live events often drive an account's popularity, with Wednesday's big game against Texas likely putting the Blue Jays ahead of their Toronto neighbours by the end of the day.

"We see huge peaks in conversation around key moments," said Doyle. "We pulled the top moments from (Toronto's 14-inning loss to Texas on Friday). There was 2,200 tweets per minute when the final pitch was thrown when the Rangers won. The second largest peak was when Josh Donaldson homered in the bottom of the first at 1,200 tweets per minute."

Doyle adds that the million-follower mark is a an excellent gauge of a team's popularity. Of Canada's seven NHL teams, only Toronto is in the seven-digit range. The Blue Jays are one of only four MLB teams over a million, joining the New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox and Philadelphia Phillies.

The Blue Jays have several advantages that have helped power them to new heights on social media. As the only MLB team in Canada, they can draw on baseball fans from across the country to engage with them on social media instead of just relying on fans in the Greater Toronto Area. Star players like pitchers David Price and Marcus Stroman and sluggers Josh Donaldson and Jose Bautista are also very active on Twitter, driving the Blue Jays' popularity.

Mike Naraine, a part-time faculty member and PhD candidate in sport management at the University of Ottawa who specializes in social media, believes that this reflects a change in how fans experience sports.

"We've moved as a sport society away from just one-on-one engagement. You know, I pay $100 for a ticket, I sit up in the stands, and I watch the product on the field or in the arena," said Naraine. "Now it's a society where I'm engaging and interacting on multiple levels, whether it's with the dual screen — my television and my tablet or my smartphone — or I'm able to interact even when I'm not watching the game and not physically in the brick-and-mortar building.

"I'm able to log on and interact with other fans while I'm still doing other things in my every day life."

Sporting events are the best example of how Twitter and other social networks have become forums for discussion, but other live events effect online behaviour as well.

"It's the same here in Canada during the federal leaders' debates," said Doyle. "We were tracking the data exactly the way we are now with the Blue Jays. You see these huge spikes around key moments in the debates. You see the leaders being talked about more on Twitter just as players in baseball are talked about more during the game."

The Blue Jays are closing in on several American teams in other sports. The Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks are the top NHL team with 1.12 million followers, with the Maple Leafs second. The Yankees are the most popular baseball team and the New England Patriots have more followers than any other NFL team, with both at 1.51 million.

The NBA's Los Angeles Lakers are the most popular professional sports team in North America at 4.49 million Twitter followers, while soccer club Real Madrid is the most popular team worldwide, with 17.3 million followers, nearly six times more than the population of the city of Madrid.

___

Follow @jchidleyhill on Twitter

John Chidley-Hill, The Canadian Press

Six stories in the news today, Oct. 14

Six stories in the news today, Oct. 14 from The Canadian Press:

———

TORIES, NDP TRY TO SHORE UP SUPPORT TODAY; LIBERALS EYE NEW SEATS

With the campaign finish line in sight, the leaders of the Conservative and New Democratic parties will spend the day shoring up support in ridings they won in 2011. Conservative Leader Stephen Harper will visit a pair of ridings in southwest Ontario while NDP Leader Tom Mulcair visits Dartmouth, N.S., and the Quebec riding of Repentigny. Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau will visit ridings in Ontario's Niagara region won by the NDP and Tories in 2011.

———

TWO GIRLS DIE, THIRD INJURED, IN ALBERTA FARM ACCIDENT

Two young girls have been killed and another injured in a farm accident near Withrow, Alta. Rocky Mountain House RCMP say the three girls were playing on a loaded truck of canola at a family farm on Tuesday evening when they became buried by the seed in the truck and started to suffocate. Despite the efforts of emergency workers, two of the girls — ages 11 and 13 — died. Another 11-year-old girl was flown to an Edmonton hospital. Media reports that all three girls were sisters.

———

MILITARY HOME EQUITY CASE HEADS TO COURT

The lawyer for a Canadian Forces veteran who lost $72,000 on the sale of his house will be in a Halifax court today to argue a proposed class action should not be struck down. Under the rules, a military member can receive 100 per cent compensation through a home-equity assistance program if they sell their home in a depressed market. The dispute centres on what constitutes a depressed market.

———

VIDEO SURFACES IN PHILIPPINES ABDUCTION

Two men who identify themselves as Canadians taken hostage last month in the Philippines have appeared at gunpoint in a video that is circulating online. One man introduces himself as Robert Hall who says he is OK, but in grave danger. Another says he is John Ridsdel and urges the Canadian government to help the hostages. They, along with a Norwegian man and a Filipina woman, were taken hostage by gunmen a resort on Samal Island last month. Authorities were trying to verify the authenticity of the video.

———

COMPANIES TURN TO CYBER INSURANCE AFTER HIGH-POFILE HACKS

In the wake of the Ashley Madison hack and other high-profile data breaches, Canadian companies are turning to so-called cyber insurance to protect themselves from the fallout of data leaks. In July, adultery website Ashley Madison made headlines after hackers broke in to the company's network and leaked customers' personal information. It was the latest in a series of incidents that experts say represent a wake-up call for executives about the real-world consequences of digital vulnerabilities.

———

TORONTO BLUE JAYS FACE DO OR DIE GAME

Millions of Canadians will be nervously glued to their TVs, radios and electronic devices this afternoon as the Toronto Blue Jays try to win the fifth and deciding game of their American League Division Series against Texas. Marcus Stroman will start for the Jays in front of a packed house at the Rogers Centre while Cole Hamels will start for the Rangers. First pitch is just after 4 p.m. ET.

———

ALSO IN THE NEWS ...

— A trial continues in Saint John, N.B., for Dennis Oland, accused of second-degree murder in the death of his father, Richard Oland.

 

The Canadian Press

Companies turn to cyber insurance after Ashley Madison and other high-profile hacks

TORONTO — In the wake of the Ashley Madison hack and other high-profile data breaches, Canadian companies are turning to so-called cyber insurance to protect themselves from the fallout of data leaks.

In July, adultery website Ashley Madison made headlines after hackers broke in to the company's network and leaked customers' personal information, including their messages to other members and sensitive financial data.

The ensuing class-action lawsuit — and founder and CEO Noel Biderman's decision to step down in late August — were the latest in a series of incidents that experts say represent a wake-up call for executives about the real-world consequences of digital vulnerabilities.

Duncan Stewart, director of technology research at Deloitte, said the past year has seen a surge in awareness about cyberattacks, and companies are turning to insurers to prepare for what seems an inevitability in an increasingly interconnected world.

"The number of attacks are rising, the severity is rising, and when they come, they're more difficult to deal with," he said.

There is no legal requirement for companies to report a hack in Canada, making the true number difficult to determine, but security company Websense said in August 2014 that 36 per cent of Canadian businesses had observed a breach in their IT security last 12 months.

In a KPMG survey of Canadian property insurance executives, data security even beat out unexpected catastrophic events as the third-biggest risk facing Canadian companies in 2015 after regulatory burdens and low interest rates.

Stewart compared significant breaches like the Ashley Madison hack to automobile collisions that result in a total write-off, yet he said companies also require coverage for the small attacks and fender-benders of cybersecurity that happen far more often.

Insurance against cyberattacks is now just a part of the cost of doing business, he said.

"You wouldn't have a factory and not have fire insurance, so why would you think about not having cyber insurance?"

Technology analyst Carmi Levy said in an email that insurance providers are stepping in to meet the needs of companies as they find themselves handling more and more data on behalf of their clients and suppliers.

"In the process, they are increasingly liable for what happens when hackers manage to break in and snag some of that data," he said.

Insurance expert Paul Kovacs, president and CEO of the industry-funded oversight body PACICC, said insurance companies are expanding their offerings to provide more than just compensation and protection from liability in the event of a cyberattack.

"When this happens, you are going to need professional help with communications, with forensic investigation, with restoring your systems and putting the protections back in," he said.

Kovacs pointed to the example of Sovereign General, part of the Co-Operators Group, which offers coverage for privacy breaches, business interruptions, extortion, and data recovery stemming from a cyberattack, as well as crisis management services.

He said companies and organizations used to dealing in sensitive information, such as hospitals and financial institutions, were among the first to become targets and have developed comprehensive cybersecurity policies.

Yet what used to be a concern just for the obvious targets is now a business risk for almost everyone, he said, and it's not just customer data that's at risk. 

In July, security company Symantec issued a report detailing the "Butterfly" hacking group that it said is responsible for at least 40 attacks since 2012 meant to steal trade secrets and industrial data in order to sell it to the highest bidder.

Kovacs said industrial espionage is spreading out from the large companies that have long been in the crosshairs as hackers become more sophisticated.

"Now, they're still going after the big companies but they're going after the mid-size companies and even some relatively small companies," he said. "The threat is spreading."

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Follow @henderburn on Twitter

 

Peter Henderson, The Canadian Press

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