Soccer is having a moment in Canada, and fans are finding more ways than ever to follow the sport they love. Whether they’re streaming matches on the go, capturing celebrations from the stands or following along in group chats, they need smartphones that can keep up before, during and after the final whistle.
As the Official Mobile Partner of Canada Soccer, Samsung Electronics Canada is helping soccer enthusiasts stay closer to the action through Galaxy S26 Ultra smartphones and experiences designed to fuel the modern fan journey.
As part of the partnership with Canada Soccer, Samsung Electronics Canada is showcasing Galaxy experiences at Canada Soccer House in Toronto, where fans can enjoy hands-on access to some of the latest Galaxy S26 Ultra features. Visitors will have the opportunity to explore capabilities such as 100x Space Zoom[1], which captures the finest details from a distance, and Horizontal Lock[2], which creates smooth, stable video recordings even in dynamic environments.
This Galaxy experience highlights how Samsung can help fans create content worth keeping and revisiting. Capturing images from across the stadium or recording a boisterous goal celebration without the shake and blur that often comes with the moment, Galaxy S26 Ultra devices help fans preserve match-day memories with confidence.
For today’s supporters, maximizing the fan experience extends well beyond the stadium. Smartphones have become the primary way for many Canadians to stream match highlights between meetings, follow live updates during a commute or share content across social channels.
At Canada Soccer House and beyond, Samsung is demonstrating how Galaxy smartphones support fans at every stage and every form of fandom. The advanced camera technology on the Galaxy S26 Ultra helps fans capture the action with clarity, while immersive displays and powerful performance make it easier to watch, share and engage with content from virtually anywhere.
As soccer culture continues to grow across the country, Samsung remains committed to helping Canadians stay connected to the moments, communities and experiences that make the sport special.
To learn more about Samsung’s Galaxy S26 Ultra and other devices, visit https://samsung.com/ca/.
The new MCP specification doesn’t fix the real problem—And most enterprises don’t know what that problem is
Posted in Commentary with tags MCP specification on June 26, 2026 by itnerdThe new enterprise-ready MCP specification addresses interoperability and enterprise readiness, but the security community’s focus on the spec itself is obscuring where the actual risk lives. Most organizations that rushed MCP deployments didn’t fail at the protocol level. They failed at the permission level—granting agents far broader access than any legitimate use case required, with no governance structure to course-correct. A better spec won’t change that.
Justin Beals, CEO & Founder, Strike Graph, an AI-native GRC and compliance automation platform had this to say:
“A new spec doesn’t fix the underlying problem. Most organizations that deployed MCP servers did it as a marketing move. They turned it on and exposed full read-write API access because that was the path of least resistance. The enterprise spec raises the bar for interoperability, but the real risk has never been the protocol. It’s been the decisions people make about what agents are allowed to touch. MCP is a software feature. Treat it like one. What is the bare minimum you need to expose? Start there. If your teams complain about limited access, let them complain. Have them make the case for what they actually need. Because the organizations that got this wrong didn’t fail at the spec level. They failed at the permission level. A better spec won’t save you from that.”
Given how important that AI is to business, enterprises need to get a handle on this and do so quickly. Otherwise businesses will continue to fly in the dark when it comes to this.
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