The first issue of Northern Overwatch is out.
That sentence still feels strange to write.
For a long time, this existed only as a concern, something half-formed, sitting in the back of my mind. A collection of notes, frustrations, observations accumulated over decades of working with systems most people never see. It was an idea born not out of ambition, but out of discomfort: the growing sense that something important was being overlooked, and that very few were willing to say it plainly. Seeing Northern Overwatch take shape feels unreal because it represents a line being crossed, from observation to action. Once you publish, you’re no longer just thinking out loud. You’re putting a stake in the ground.
There is no shortage of technology coverage in Canada, or anywhere else for that matter. But much of it focuses on novelty, convenience, market value, or innovation for its own sake. Rarely does it stop to ask whether these systems align with the values we claim to hold: privacy, fairness, proportionality, accountability, and respect for individual autonomy. And even more rarely does it ask those questions in language meant for everyone.
That gap is what Northern Overwatch is trying to fill.
This isn’t about opposing technology. It’s about refusing to accept that progress must come at the expense of privacy, dignity, or public understanding. It’s about recognizing that Canadian values, quietly held, often assumed, sometimes taken for granted, deserve active protection in a digital world that does not naturally respect borders or traditions.
What makes this feel particularly surreal is how quickly everything moves once you decide to speak. The moment Issue 1 went live, Northern Overwatch stopped being hypothetical. It became accountable: to readers, to facts, to clarity, and to the responsibility that comes with claiming to speak in the public interest. That responsibility is not taken lightly.
This project is not about being loud. It’s about being precise. Not about outrage, but about explanation. Not about telling people what to think, but about ensuring they are not kept in the dark.
Privacy sits at the center of that mission, not as an abstract ideal, but as a practical, lived necessity. Without privacy, there is no meaningful consent. Without consent, there is no trust. And without trust, digital systems – no matter how advanced – become brittle, adversarial, and ultimately unstable.
Issue 2 exists because Issue 1 had to exist first. Because once you say someone needs to watch, the next step is to actually do it. Northern Overwatch is still taking shape. It will evolve, refine its voice, and sharpen its focus. But the foundation is now visible: a commitment to Canadian values, a belief that privacy matters, and a conviction that people deserve clear explanations about systems that affect their lives. This may feel unreal today. But that’s often how meaningful work begins… with certainty, but with the quiet realization that something necessary has finally started.
And now, it continues.







