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Strong US economy's resilience to shocks tested by Iran war
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Donald pleased to have Rahm back for Ryder three-peat bid
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Trump arrives in China for superpower summit with Xi
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UK's Catherine on first official foreign trip since cancer diagnosis
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British scientists among winners of top Spanish award
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Mbappe can show 'commitment' to Real Madrid: Arbeloa
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Chinese tech giant Alibaba posts profit drop amid AI drive
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King Charles lays out Starmer's agenda as PM fights for survival
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Japan suspend Eddie Jones for verbally abusing officials
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England drop Crawley for 1st Test against New Zealand
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Stocks rise ahead of US-China summit as Iran talks stall
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SoftBank profit quadruples to $32 bn on AI investments
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China tech giant Tencent sees Q1 profit jump after AI bets
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Nissan expects return to profit after huge loss
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World Cup broadcast deadlock ends up in Indian court
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Asian stocks mixed on US-Iran impasse, AI setbacks
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Besieged Starmer seeks to heal Labour divisions in King's Speech
Radio-Canada, CBC returning to Twitter
Canada's public broadcaster CBC and its French-language arm Radio-Canada said Tuesday that they were returning to Twitter after the social media site removed a "government-funded media" label.
The outlets had paused posting on Twitter on April 17 because of the tag which they said unfairly questioned their editorial independence.
"In the case of CBC/Radio-Canada this labeling is untrue and deceptive," they said in a statement at the time.
While the broadcaster is publicly funded, its editorial independence is protected under Canadian broadcasting law, they said.
Luce Julien, executive director of Radio-Canada, said it and the CBC would now resume posting on certain Twitter accounts because it is essential to provide credible information to the public.
"Twitter generates very little direct traffic in the Canadian radio ecosystem," Julien said, but it remains an influential platform.
"We owe it to ourselves as a public media company to be active there and to continue to disseminate verified information."
Julien also said Radio-Canada will not pay to receive a blue verification tick from Twitter, saying the checkmarks are no longer a guarantee of credibility.
Radio-Canada and CBC's exit from Twitter followed that of National Public Radio in the United States over the same tag, which had also been applied to the BBC before the British broadcaster successfully petitioned to have it changed to "publicly-funded."
G.Teles--PC