
Telus offers to fully own digital unit for greater control of AI capabilities
June 12 (Reuters) - Telus (T.TO), opens new tab said on Thursday it intends to acquire the shares in its listed digital services subsidiary it does not currently own, as the Canadian telecom firm seeks greater control of the unit's artificial intelligence capabilities.
The company has offered $3.40 per share to acquire the shares it does not own in Telus Digital (TIXT.TO), opens new tab, valuing the unit at $946.8 million, according to Reuters' calculation. Telus currently holds about 57% of the digital unit's outstanding shares directly and through its other units.
This is a 15% premium to the last closing price of the subsidiary's U.S.-listed stock. U.S.-listed shares of the digital unit are down more than 24% this year, severely lagging the parent company whose U.S. listing is up nearly 19% this year.
The move underscores Telus' push for more control of the digital unit, which helps businesses adopt AI and develop data strategies amid a worldwide push to harness the technology.
"Our proposal to fully acquire Telus Digital reflects our belief that closer operational proximity... will enable enhanced AI capabilities and SaaS transformation across all lines of our business," Telus CEO Darren Entwistle said.
Telus said last month it is investing more than C$70 billion ($51.40 billion) in Canada over the next five years to expand its network infrastructure in the country, which would be focused around launching two new AI data centers.
Barclays is serving as Telus' financial advisor.
($1 = 1.3619 Canadian dollars)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
35 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Scientists reveal how humans will have superpowers by 2030
By 2030, rapid technological advancements are expected to reshape humanity, unlocking abilities once confined to science fiction—from superhuman strength to enhanced senses. Robotic exoskeletons may soon allow people to lift heavy objects with ease, while AI-powered wearables, such as smart glasses and earbuds, could provide real-time information and immersive augmented reality experiences. Healthcare may be revolutionized by microscopic nanobots capable of repairing tissue and fighting disease from within the bloodstream, potentially extending human lifespans. Developers are also working on contact lenses with infrared vision and devices that allow users to "feel" digital objects, paving the way for entirely new ways to experience the world. Tech pioneers like former Google engineer Ray Kurzweil believe these innovations are early steps toward the merging of humans and machines, with brain-computer interfaces offering direct access to digital intelligence. While many of these breakthroughs are already in progress, others remain in the experimental phase, facing significant technical and ethical challenges, including concerns about privacy and safety. Still, some of these futuristic technologies may become reality within the next five years, with the potential to enhance human strength, cognition, and perception in ways never before possible. Superhuman strength Kurzweil, a self-proclaimed futurist, has claimed that the foundation of human immortality will begin in 2030, with man set to merge with machines by 2045. By 2030, robotic exoskeletons could give human beings super strength, either by enabling feats like lifting huge objects in factories or making soldiers stronger on the battlefield. US-based robotics company Sarcos Robotics has already demonstrated a robotic exoskeleton that has a 'strength gain' ratio of 20-to-one. This means that normal people can carry weights of up to 200 pounds over an extended period of time. The suit took 17 years and $175 million to develop. Other exoskeletons, such as German Bionic's 'Exia' exoskeleton, incorporate AI that learns from the wearer's movement, enabling them to lift huge weights without feeling tired. These exoskeletons are already being used by staff in German hospitals. Super-healing and immortality In five years, humans could have tiny 'nanobots' in their bloodstream to keep them healthy, meaning people could recover rapidly from injury and even from diseases such as cancer. Kurzweil has claimed that by 2029, artificial intelligence will become 'superhuman' and that will allow for more technological breakthroughs to follow rapidly. One of the upcoming breakthroughs, according to Kurzweil, will be the development of microscopic nanobots that operate within the bloodstream, maintaining health without the need for constant medical monitoring. In his latest book, The Singularity Is Nearer, Kurzweil forecasts a dramatic transformation in human life after 2029, with essential goods becoming more affordable and people beginning to merge with machines through technologies like brain-computer interfaces, similar to Elon Musk's Neuralink. He also pointed to recent advances in artificial intelligence, including tools like ChatGPT, as evidence that his 2005 predictions are on track, stating that "the trajectory is clear." Super vision Contact lenses that enable wearers to see huge distances or even to beam computer information directly into their eyes could be on sale by 2030. Scientists in China recently developed contact lenses that allow wearers to see in the dark. The new lenses allow wearers to see infrared light, without requiring bulky night-vision goggles. Professor Tian Xue, at the University of Science and Technology of China, said he hopes his work could inspire scientists to create contact lenses that offer people 'super vision.' Enhanced senses Devices that give humans enhanced senses could be on the market, with research by Ericsson, a Swedish multinational networking and telecommunications company, suggesting that digital wristbands could soon give anyone the ability to 'feel' digital objects. Pioneering 'cyborg' designers have already tested devices that give people superhuman senses. Entrepreneur, transhumanist, and self-described cyborg Liviu Babitz created 'Northsense,' which allowed him to sense when he faces magnetic north. Manel Munoz, founder of the Trans Species Society, implanted two 'fins' on top of his head, which enabled him to 'hear' the weather. The sound is transmitted through his skull by bone conduction. Munoz has said he hears the weather through the 'sound of bubbles.' Knowing everything instantly with digital wearables By 2030, AI-enhanced wearables such as earbuds could enable everyone to plug into 'digital superpowers,' with everyone able to receive answers instantly. Meta is already adding AI to Ray-Ban glasses, and Google is designing an operating system for XR (augmented reality and virtual reality). Computer scientist Louis Rosenberg has said that these abilities will emerge from the convergence of AI, augmented reality, and conversational computing. 'They will be unleashed by context-aware AI agents that are loaded into body-worn devices that see what we see, hear what we hear, experience what we experience, and provide us with enhanced abilities to perceive and interpret our world,' Rosenberg explained. 'I refer to this new technological direction as augmented mentality and I predict that by 2030, a majority of us will live our lives with context-aware AI agents bringing digital superpowers into our daily experiences.'


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
When prompted to show a female investor, here's what AI created!
Artificial intelligence (AI) may now be able to do everything from creating images to providing answers to almost any question – but there is one area where it is stumped. It struggles to imagine women as investors. When asked to create images of investors, AI tools overwhelmingly depicted men. Even when asked to portray an investor with traditionally feminine characteristics – such as a skirt or painted nails – they still showed men, just with those features. That's according to trading and investment company eToro, which put AI platforms to the test. This is despite there being 6.7 million female investors in the UK – fewer than the 10 million male investors, but still a sizeable number. eToro asked so-called 'generative AI' tools to create the images. The platforms use algorithms – a set of instructions designed to solve a problem – to create content such as text or pictures. A user can type in a prompt, which may be a question or a description of what you want the tool to give you. For example, you may ask the AI tool to write a shopping list or to produce an image of a dog. It then uses online sources – which could include photographs, books, news articles, journals and other internet material – to answer in a conversational tone or create an image based on what you requested. But as it uses existing materials, the biases of its sources can creep into its responses to any requests. When asked to produce an image of an 'investor in a skirt', three of the four images created by the AI tools were sharply dressed men in skirts. Only one was of a woman in a pencil skirt. When the AI tools were asked to produce an image of an 'investor with red fingernails', all four pictures produced were of men in suits wearing red nail polish. It was only when asked to produce a hyper-realistic 'portrait of an investor in a dress' did all four AI platforms finally show an image of a woman. Unfortunately, some of these images show the investors wearing revealing clothing, while another woman wears a dress made from banknotes. AI also assumes women are assistants to investors. When AI was promoted to show 'an investor with their assistant', it created images of mostly middle-aged men in suits as the investor and women as their assistants. Lale Akoner, global markets Analyst at eToro, says: 'The misleading and harmful stereotype of the investor as a professional-looking man is sadly alive and well. 'The results simply tell women they don't belong. 'This isn't just an AI bias – it's a societal issue holding back women financially.' Depictions of investors in films, books and articles will be partly to blame as these sources are likely to be absorbed by AI tools. Dr Ylva Baeckstrom, a former banker and now senior finance lecturer at King's College London Business School, found male lead actors make up 76 per cent of the screen time allocated to lead roles in films about finance. The research, published by eToro, proves films mainly show men as the investor while women are depicted as wives, mistresses and assistants. It's a worry as households are starting to turn to AI for financial information. Dr Baeckstrom says women should question all of the information AI tools produce – and the first step in doing this is to become financially educated so you can analyse the information it gives you. Plus, this will help spot what is called 'AI hallucinations', where tools answer using false or nonsensical information. 'AI will make things up. You can't know whether it's true or not – you can't trust it. If you're a savvy user, you're much more likely to benefit from it. You'll question things,' she says. Finally, users must correct AI platforms if they produce a text or an image with these financial biases, Dr Baeckstrom says. 'We have the opportunity with AI to start again without the biases. We need to teach AI that the blueprint of an investor is not a man.'


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Ex-education secretary Michael Gove warns schoolchildren need more traditional classroom teaching to fend off dangers of AI 'cheating'
Former education secretary Michael Gove has said children don't need to be taught digital skills but need a proper academic education to help them combat the rise of AI. And he has argued that with 'an epidemic of cheating' triggered by AI, a handwritten essay is the surest test of ability. The Tory grandee, now Lord Gove, said he is more convinced than he ever was about the importance of a traditional education as AI tools like Chat GPT become commonplace. 'AI has created a huge potential for corruption and a huge opportunity for people to present themselves as knowledgeable when they don't actually have those skills. The way to demonstrate you have those skills is through that traditional knowledge. 'It is precisely because AI is going to change our lives so much that I believe we need to be armed with the knowledge that traditional education provides.' In his battle against what he saw as schools dumbing down, Lord Gove's tenure as Education Secretary in the coalition Cabinet from 2010 to 2014 was marked by his run-ins with education unions. Speaking to education leaders and pupils at an education conference at the Princess of Wales' former school Downe House in Newbury last week, he said children had got 'all the digital skills they could ever need'. And he told them it was 'better to live in the world of Pythagoras than Pokémon'. 'One of the in vogue buzz phrases of our era is "we want schools to teach digital skills". Nonsense! Young people today are digital natives – it's what they get outside school - arguably to excess.' Instead he said 'access to an academic education' would give children 'skills such as critical thinking, social confidence and the ability to understand what is true and false'. 'The future of education is going back to tradition. AI is already changing what is happening in education and we are already seeing its impact in higher education. 'An increasing amount of the work submitted is work that is not the product of scholarship or time spent in dusty libraries or at the thoughtful analysis of lecture notes but it's taken direct from chat GPT or other AI tools. 'There is an epidemic of cheating in higher education and the same thing could spread throughout the whole education ecosystem.' He said coursework could easily 'be downloaded or synthesised by AI' and delivering exam work through a digital platform was 'a retrograde step because those tools make it easier to cheat'. The former cabinet minister, now the editor of The Spectator magazine said the 'surest test in higher education and also in schools of what you can do and the ability to pass on to the next stage of life is actually a handwritten pencil and paper essay or an oral exam conversation'. He argued that young people needed 'the patient practice of skills and the cumulative acquisition of knowledge' to acquire the 'mastery' in a subject which would help them to use AI to their advantage. 'Who would have thought that this whole technological revolution would have reminded us that the traditional ways to teach are actually the best,' he said. Hitting out at 'the progressive educational argument' that 'because all that information is online or available online that you don't need to know as much as previous generations'. He said: 'The opposite is true – because there is so much information out there – you need to know more. You need more in order to be able to discern the bogus from the honest. 'A well-stocked mind is the best guide and the most effective guide for making your way through this forest of knowledge which is there for you.'