Tag: Telecommunication

The latest news and updates on secure VoIP communications.

In 2026, dialing in is no longer about making a connection. It’s about the intelligence behind it. For decades, telephony was considered a basic business utility — necessary, but rarely strategic. Today, that mindset is changing rapidly. Across Canada, organizations in healthcare, education, government, and enterprise are realizing that their communication infrastructure is becoming one of the most powerful platforms for automation, analytics, and customer engagement. As 2026 telephony trends in Canada evolve, the conversation has shifted from simply deploying 5G coverage to monetizing 5G-Advanced (5G-A) networks, enabling AI-powered communications, and adapting to new regulatory shifts such as CRTC 2026-43, which lowers barriers for switching telecom providers. For Canadian executives planning their 2027 fiscal strategies, the message is clear: telephony is no longer just a cost center—it is becoming a strategic AI-driven asset capable of driving operational efficiency, security, and measurable ROI. Read More…

The pandemic accelerated the modernization of the workplace with the widespread introduction of remote work, and the development of mediums, or technology, which make this possible.  The general desire to permanently establish workplace flexibility has remained prominent. Through direct routing, Microsoft Teams calling over the cloud can satisfy this demand.

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The Canadian Government has recently begun their efforts to obtain authorization to regulate security practices among telecommunication and other industries such as finance, transportation, and energy. Bill C-26, “an act respecting cybersecurity”, was tabled on June 14, 2022, and introduces the Critical Cyber Systems Protection Act (CCSPA) to supplement Canadian telecommunication security regulations. So far, this bill has only completed its first reading in the House of Commons, and must pass through the rest of the legislative process to constitute law. It looks favorable that the bill will soon make this transition to become a law. If it does it will authorize the Canadian Government to take the steps they deem necessary to ensure a high quality of security in these “vital” services.

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