[Index Libertés] Pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

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Tugdual
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Re: [Index] Libertés : pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

#1201 Message par Tugdual » lundi 25 mai 2020 à 9:43

TCS = trouble de la communication sociale (24/09/2014).

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Re: [Index] Libertés : pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

#1202 Message par Tugdual » mardi 26 mai 2020 à 9:40

TCS = trouble de la communication sociale (24/09/2014).

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Re: [Index] Libertés : pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

#1203 Message par Tugdual » jeudi 28 mai 2020 à 11:01

TCS = trouble de la communication sociale (24/09/2014).

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Re: [Index] Libertés : pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

#1204 Message par freeshost » vendredi 29 mai 2020 à 0:09

Criteo, un géant du marketing de surveillance français

Comme l'article est assez long (et pas complètement simple à comprendre), j'en ai fait un pdf ( 2020_Criteo_Un_Geant_Du_Marketing_De_Surveillance_Francais.pdf ). :mrgreen:
Pardon, humilité, humour, hasard, confiance, humanisme, partage, curiosité et diversité sont des gros piliers de la liberté et de la sérénité.

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Re: [Index] Libertés : pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

#1205 Message par LynxBlanc » vendredi 29 mai 2020 à 1:18

Effrayant l'article sur Critéo.
Et hallucinant de voir tous les efforts mis en oeuvre juste pour collecter nos données.
Non diagnostiqué
But we've got to verify it legally to see...to see? If she...if she? Is Morally, Ethic'lly, Spiritually, Physically, Positively, Absolutely, Undeniably and Reliably Dead!
Munchkin's Mayor Council

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Re: [Index] Libertés : pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

#1206 Message par freeshost » dimanche 31 mai 2020 à 17:20

freeshost a écrit : mercredi 13 mai 2020 à 9:45 Naomi Klein: How big tech plans to profit from the pandemic
Spoiler : Quotation : 
Naomi Klein
Wed 13 May 2020 06.00 BST

Republished with permission from The Intercept

As the coronavirus continues to kill thousands each day, tech companies are seizing the opportunity to extend their reach and power.

For a few fleeting moments during the New York governor Andrew Cuomo’s daily coronavirus briefing on Wednesday 6 May, the sombre grimace that has filled our screens for weeks was briefly replaced by something resembling a smile.

“We are ready, we’re all-in,” the governor gushed. “We are New Yorkers, so we’re aggressive about it, we’re ambitious about it … We realise that change is not only imminent, but it can actually be a friend if done the right way.”
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The inspiration for these uncharacteristically good vibes was a video visit from the former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, who joined the governor’s briefing to announce that he will be heading up a panel to reimagine New York state’s post-Covid reality, with an emphasis on permanently integrating technology into every aspect of civic life.

“The first priorities of what we’re trying to do,” Schmidt said, “are focused on telehealth, remote learning, and broadband … We need to look for solutions that can be presented now, and accelerated, and use technology to make things better.” Lest there be any doubt that the former Google chair’s goals were purely benevolent, his video background featured a framed pair of golden angel wings.

Just one day earlier, Cuomo had announced a similar partnership with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to develop “a smarter education system”. Calling Gates a “visionary”, Cuomo said the pandemic has created “a moment in history when we can actually incorporate and advance [Gates’s] ideas … all these buildings, all these physical classrooms – why, with all the technology you have?” he asked, apparently rhetorically.

It has taken some time to gel, but something resembling a coherent pandemic shock doctrine is beginning to emerge. Call it the Screen New Deal. Far more hi-tech than anything we have seen during previous disasters, the future that is being rushed into being as the bodies still pile up treats our past weeks of physical isolation not as a painful necessity to save lives, but as a living laboratory for a permanent – and highly profitable – no-touch future.

Anuja Sonalker, the CEO of Steer Tech, a Maryland-based company selling self-parking technology, recently summed up the new virus-personalised pitch. “There has been a distinct warming up to humanless, contactless technology,” she said. “Humans are biohazards, machines are not.”

It’s a future in which our homes are never again exclusively personal spaces, but are also, via high-speed digital connectivity, our schools, our doctor’s offices, our gyms, and, if determined by the state, our jails. Of course, for many of us, those same homes were already turning into our never-off workplaces and our primary entertainment venues before the pandemic, and surveillance incarceration “in the community” was already booming. But in the future that is hastily being constructed, all of these trends are poised for a warp-speed acceleration.

This is a future in which, for the privileged, almost everything is home delivered, either virtually via streaming and cloud technology, or physically via driverless vehicle or drone, then screen “shared” on a mediated platform. It’s a future that employs far fewer teachers, doctors and drivers. It accepts no cash or credit cards (under guise of virus control), and has skeletal mass transit and far less live art. It’s a future that claims to be run on “artificial intelligence”, but is actually held together by tens of millions of anonymous workers tucked away in warehouses, data centres, content-moderation mills, electronic sweatshops, lithium mines, industrial farms, meat-processing plants and prisons, where they are left unprotected from disease and hyper-exploitation. It’s a future in which our every move, our every word, our every relationship is trackable, traceable and data-mineable by unprecedented collaborations between government and tech giants.

If all of this sounds familiar, it’s because, pre-Covid, this precise app-driven, gig-fuelled future was being sold to us in the name of friction-free convenience and personalisation. But many of us had concerns. About the security, quality and inequity of telehealth and online classrooms. About driverless cars mowing down pedestrians and drones smashing packages (and people). About location tracking and cash-free commerce obliterating our privacy and entrenching racial and gender discrimination. About unscrupulous social media platforms poisoning our information ecology and our kids’ mental health. About “smart cities” filled with sensors supplanting local government. About the good jobs these technologies wiped out. About the bad jobs they mass produced.

And most of all, we had concerns about the democracy-threatening wealth and power accumulated by a handful of tech companies that are masters of abdication – eschewing all responsibility for the wreckage left behind in the fields they now dominate, whether media, retail or transportation.

That was the ancient past, also known as February. Today, a great many of those well-founded concerns are being swept away by a tidal wave of panic, and this warmed-over dystopia is going through a rush-job rebranding. Now, against a harrowing backdrop of mass death, it is being sold to us on the dubious promise that these technologies are the only possible way to pandemic-proof our lives, the indispensable keys to keeping ourselves and our loved ones safe.

Thanks to Cuomo and his various billionaire partnerships (including one with Michael Bloomberg for testing and tracing), New York state is being positioned as the gleaming showroom for this grim future – but the ambitions reach far beyond the borders of any one state or country.

And at the dead centre of it all is Eric Schmidt.

Well before Americans understood the threat of Covid-19, Schmidt had been on an aggressive lobbying and public-relations campaign, pushing precisely the Black Mirror vision of society that Cuomo has just empowered him to build. At the heart of this vision is seamless integration of government with a handful of Silicon Valley giants – with public schools, hospitals, doctor’s offices, police and military all outsourcing (at a high cost) many of their core functions to private tech companies.

It’s a vision Schmidt has been advancing in his roles as chair of the Defense Innovation Board, which advises the US Department of Defense on increased use of artificial intelligence in the military, and as chair of the powerful National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence, or NSCAI, which advises Congress on “advances in artificial intelligence, related machine learning developments and associated technologies”, with the goal of addressing “the national and economic security needs of the United States, including economic risk”. Both boards are crowded with powerful Silicon Valley CEOs and top executives from companies including Oracle, Amazon, Microsoft, Facebook and of course, Schmidt’s former colleagues at Google.

As chair, Schmidt – who still holds more than $5.3bn in shares of Alphabet (Google’s parent company), as well as large investments in other tech firms – has essentially been running a Washington-based shakedown on behalf of Silicon Valley. The main purpose of the two boards is to call for exponential increases in government spending on research into artificial intelligence and on tech-enabling infrastructure such as 5G – investments that would directly benefit the companies in which Schmidt and other members of these boards have extensive holdings.

First in closed-door presentations to lawmakers, and later in public-facing opinion articles and interviews, the thrust of Schmidt’s argument has been that since the Chinese government is willing to spend limitless public money building the infrastructure of high-tech surveillance, while allowing Chinese tech companies such as Alibaba, Baidu and Huawei to pocket the profits from commercial applications, the US’s dominant position in the global economy is on the precipice of collapsing.

The Electronic Privacy Information Center (Epic) recently got access, through a freedom of information (FOI) request, to a presentation made by Schmidt’s NSCAI in May 2019. Its slides make a series of alarmist claims about how China’s relatively lax regulatory infrastructure and its bottomless appetite for surveillance are causing it to pull ahead of the US in a number of fields, including “AI for medical diagnosis”, autonomous vehicles, digital infrastructure, “smart cities”, ride-sharing and cashless commerce.

The reasons given for China’s competitive edge are myriad, ranging from the sheer volume of consumers who shop online; “the lack of legacy banking systems in China”, which has allowed it to leapfrog over cash and credit cards and unleash “a huge e-commerce and digital services market” using digital payments; and a severe doctor shortage, which has led the government to work closely with tech companies such as Tencent to use AI for “predictive” medicine. The slides note that in China, tech companies “have the authority to quickly clear regulatory barriers, while American initiatives are mired in HIPPA compliance and FDA approval”.

More than any other factor, however, the NSCAI points to China’s willingness to embrace public-private partnerships in mass surveillance and data collection as a reason for its competitive edge. The presentation touts China’s “Explicit government support and involvement eg facial recognition deployment”. It argues that “surveillance is one of the ‘first-and-best customers’ for Al” and further, that “mass surveillance is a killer application for deep learning”.

A slide titled “State Datasets: Surveillance = Smart Cities” notes that China, along with Google’s main Chinese competitor, Alibaba, are racing ahead.

This is notable because Google’s parent company, Alphabet, has been pushing this precise vision through its Sidewalk Labs division, choosing a large portion of Toronto’s waterfront as its “smart city” prototype. But the Toronto project was just shut down after two years of ceaseless controversy relating to the enormous amounts of personal data that Alphabet would collect, a lack of privacy protections, and questionable benefits for the city as a whole.

Five months after this presentation, in November, NSCAI issued an interim report to Congress further raising the alarm about the need for the US to match China’s adaptation of these controversial technologies. “We are in a strategic competition,” states the report, obtained via FOI by Epic. “AI will be at the centre. The future of our national security and economy are at stake.”

By late February, Schmidt was taking his campaign to the public, perhaps understanding that the budget increases his board was calling for could not be approved without a great deal more buy-in. In a New York Times article headlined “I used to Run Google. Silicon Valley Could Lose to China”, Schmidt called for “unprecedented partnerships between government and industry” and, once again sounding the yellow peril alarm, wrote:

“AI will open new frontiers in everything from biotechnology to banking, and it is also a defense department priority … If current trends continue, China’s overall investments in research and development are expected to surpass those of the United States within 10 years, around the same time its economy is projected to become larger than ours.

Unless these trends change, in the 2030s we will be competing with a country that has a bigger economy, more research and development investments, better research, wider deployment of new technologies and stronger computing infrastructure … Ultimately, the Chinese are competing to become the world’s leading innovators, and the United States is not playing to win.”

The only solution, for Schmidt, was a gush of public money. Praising the White House for requesting a doubling of research funding in AI and quantum information science, he wrote: “We should plan to double funding in those fields again as we build institutional capacity in labs and research centres … At the same time, Congress should meet the president’s request for the highest level of defence R & D funding in over 70 years, and the defense department should capitalise on that resource surge to build breakthrough capabilities in AI, quantum, hypersonics and other priority technology areas.”

That was exactly two weeks before the coronavirus outbreak was declared a pandemic, and there was no mention that a goal of this vast, hi-tech expansion was to protect American health. Only that it was necessary to avoid being outcompeted by China. But, of course, that would soon change.

In the two months since, Schmidt has put these pre-existing demands – for massive public expenditures on high-tech research and infrastructure, for a slew of “public-private partnerships” in AI, and for the loosening of myriad privacy and safety protections – through an aggressive rebranding exercise. Now all of these measures (and more) are being sold to the public as our only possible hope of protecting ourselves from a novel virus that will be with us for years to come.

And the tech companies to which Schmidt has deep ties, and which populate the influential advisory boards he chairs, have all repositioned themselves as benevolent protectors of public health and munificent champions of “everyday hero” essential workers (many of whom, like delivery drivers, would lose their jobs if these companies get their way). Less than two weeks into New York state’s lockdown, Schmidt wrote an article for the Wall Street Journal that both set the new tone and made clear that Silicon Valley had every intention of leveraging the crisis for a permanent transformation.

“Like other Americans, technologists are trying to do their part to support the front-line pandemic response …

But every American should be asking where we want the nation to be when the Covid-19 pandemic is over. How could the emerging technologies being deployed in the current crisis propel us into a better future? … Companies like Amazon know how to supply and distribute efficiently. They will need to provide services and advice to government officials who lack the computing systems and expertise.

We should also accelerate the trend toward remote learning, which is being tested today as never before. Online, there is no requirement of proximity, which allows students to get instruction from the best teachers, no matter what school district they reside in …

The need for fast, large-scale experimentation will also accelerate the biotech revolution … Finally, the country is long overdue for a real digital infrastructure … If we are to build a future economy and education system based on tele-everything, we need a fully connected population and ultrafast infrastructure. The government must make a massive investment – perhaps as part of a stimulus package – to convert the nation’s digital infrastructure to cloud-based platforms and link them with a 5G network.”

Indeed, Schmidt has been relentless in pursuing this vision. Two weeks after that article appeared, he described the ad-hoc home schooling programming that teachers and families across the country had been forced to cobble together during this public health emergency as “a massive experiment in remote learning”.

The goal of this experiment, he said, was “trying to find out: how do kids learn remotely? And with that data we should be able to build better remote and distance learning tools which, when combined with the teacher … will help kids learn better.” During this same video call, hosted by the Economic Club of New York, Schmidt also called for more telehealth, more 5G, more digital commerce and the rest of the preexisting wish list. All in the name of fighting the virus.

His most telling comment, however, was this: “The benefit of these corporations, which we love to malign, in terms of the ability to communicate, the ability to deal with health, the ability to get information, is profound. Think about what your life would be like in America without Amazon.” He added that people should “be a little bit grateful that these companies got the capital, did the investment, built the tools that we’re using now, and have really helped us out”.

Schmidt’s words are a reminder that until very recently, public pushback against these companies was surging. Presidential candidates were openly discussing breaking up big tech. Amazon was forced to pull its plans for a New York headquarters because of fierce local opposition. Google’s Sidewalk Labs project was in perennial crisis, and Google workers were refusing to build surveillance tech with military applications.

In short, democracy – inconvenient public engagement in the designing of critical institutions and public spaces – was turning out to be the single greatest obstacle to the vision Schmidt was advancing, first from his perch at the top of Google and Alphabet, and then as chair of two powerful boards advising US Congress and the Department of Defense. As the NSCAI documents reveal, this inconvenient exercise of power by members of the public and by tech workers inside these mega-firms has, from the perspective of men such as Schmidt and the Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, maddeningly slowed down the AI arms race, keeping fleets of potentially deadly driverless cars and trucks off the roads, protecting private health records from becoming a weapon used by employers against workers, preventing urban spaces from being blanketing with facial recognition software, and much more.

Now, in the midst of the carnage of this ongoing pandemic, and the fear and uncertainty about the future it has brought, these companies clearly see their moment to sweep out all that democratic engagement. To have the same kind of power as their Chinese competitors, who have the luxury of functioning without being hampered by intrusions of either labour or civil rights.

All of this is moving very fast. The Australian government has contracted with Amazon to store the data for its controversial coronavirus tracking app. The Canadian government has contracted with Amazon to deliver medical equipment, raising questions about why it bypassed the public postal service. And in just a few short days in early May, Alphabet has spun up a new Sidewalk Labs initiative to remake urban infrastructure with $400m in seed capital. Josh Marcuse, the executive director of the Defense Innovation Board chaired by Schmidt, announced that he was leaving that job to work full-time at Google as head of strategy and innovation for global public sector, meaning that he will be helping Google to cash in on some of the many opportunities he and Schmidt have been busily creating with their lobbying.

To be clear, technology is most certainly a key part of how we must protect public health in the coming months and years. The question is: will that technology be subject to the disciplines of democracy and public oversight, or will it be rolled out in state-of-exception frenzy, without asking critical questions that will shape our lives for decades to come? Questions such as these, for instance: if we are indeed seeing how critical digital connectivity is in times of crisis, should these networks, and our data, really be in the hands of private players such as Google, Amazon and Apple? If public funds are paying for so much of it, should the public also own and control it? If the internet is essential for so much in our lives, as it clearly is, should it be treated as a nonprofit public utility?

And while there is no doubt that the ability to teleconference has been a lifeline in this period of lockdown, there are serious debates to be had about whether our more lasting protections are distinctly more human. Take education. Schmidt is right that overcrowded classrooms present a health risk, at least until we have a vaccine. So how about hiring double the number of teachers and cutting class size in half? How about making sure that every school has a nurse?

That would create much-needed jobs in a depression-level unemployment crisis, and give everyone in the learning environment more elbow room. If buildings are too crowded, how about dividing the day into shifts, and having more outdoor education, drawing on the plentiful research that shows that time in nature enhances children’s capacity to learn?

Introducing those kinds of changes would be hard, to be sure. But they are not nearly as risky as giving up on the tried-and-true technology of trained humans teaching younger humans face-to-face, in groups where they learn to socialise with one another to boot.

Upon learning of New York state’s new partnership with the Gates Foundation, Andy Pallotta, the president of the New York State United Teachers union, was quick to react: “If we want to reimagine education, let’s start with addressing the need for social workers, mental health counsellors, school nurses, enriching arts courses, advanced courses and smaller class sizes in school districts across the state,” he said. A coalition of parents’ groups also pointed out that if they had indeed been living an “experiment in remote learning” (as Schmidt put it), then the results were deeply worrying: “Since the schools were shut down in mid-March, our understanding of the profound deficiencies of screen-based instruction has only grown.”

In addition to the obvious class and race biases against children who lack internet access and home computers (problems that tech companies are eager to be paid to solve with massive tech buys), there are big questions about whether remote teaching can serve many kids with disabilities, as required by law. And there is no technological solution to the problem of learning in a home environment that is overcrowded and/or abusive.

The issue is not whether schools must change in the face of a highly contagious virus for which we have neither cure nor inoculation. Like every institution where humans gather in groups, they will change. The trouble, as always in these moments of collective shock, is the absence of public debate about what those changes should look like, and who they should benefit – private tech companies or students?

The same questions need to be asked about health. Avoiding doctor’s offices and hospitals during a pandemic makes good sense. But telehealth misses a huge amount. So we need to have an evidence-based debate about the pros and cons of spending scarce public resources on telehealth – rather than on more trained nurses, equipped with all the necessary protective equipment, who are able to make house calls to diagnose and treat patients in their homes. And, perhaps most urgently, we need to get the balance right between virus tracking apps, which, with the proper privacy protections, have a role to play, and the calls for a “community health corps” that would put millions of Americans to work, not only doing contact-tracing, but making sure that everyone has the material resources and support they need to quarantine safely.

In each case, we face real and hard choices between investing in humans and investing in technology. Because the brutal truth is that, as it stands, we are very unlikely to do both. The refusal to transfer anything like the needed resources to states and cities in successive federal bailouts means that the coronavirus health crisis is now slamming headlong into a manufactured austerity crisis. Public schools, universities, hospitals and transit are facing existential questions about their futures. If tech companies win their ferocious lobbying campaign for remote learning, telehealth, 5G and driverless vehicles – their Screen New Deal – there simply won’t be any money left over for urgent public priorities, never mind the Green New Deal that our planet urgently needs. On the contrary: the price tag for all the shiny gadgets will be mass teacher layoffs and hospital closures.

Tech provides us with powerful tools, but not every solution is technological. And the trouble with outsourcing key decisions about how to “reimagine” our states and cities to men such as Bill Gates and Schmidt is that they have spent their lives demonstrating the belief that there is no problem that technology cannot fix.

For them, and many others in Silicon Valley, the pandemic is a golden opportunity to receive not just the gratitude, but the deference and power that they feel has been unjustly denied. And Andrew Cuomo, by putting the former Google chair in charge of the body that will shape the state’s reopening, appears to have just given him something close to free rein.
Traduit par lulamae, modifié et partagé ici par freeshost. :mrgreen: ( Big_Tech_Et_Pandemie.pdf )
Pardon, humilité, humour, hasard, confiance, humanisme, partage, curiosité et diversité sont des gros piliers de la liberté et de la sérénité.

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Re: [Index] Libertés : pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

#1207 Message par Tugdual » samedi 13 juin 2020 à 10:36

Des députés plaident pour une prolongation :
TCS = trouble de la communication sociale (24/09/2014).

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Re: [Index] Libertés : pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

#1208 Message par freeshost » samedi 20 juin 2020 à 9:10

Pardon, humilité, humour, hasard, confiance, humanisme, partage, curiosité et diversité sont des gros piliers de la liberté et de la sérénité.

Diagnostiqué autiste en l'été 2014 :)

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Re: [Index] Libertés : pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

#1209 Message par freeshost » jeudi 2 juillet 2020 à 9:58

Huawei doit apprendre à vivre sans Google.
Spoiler : Citation : 
Anouch Seydtaghia
Publié mercredi 1 juillet 2020 à 21:10
Modifié mercredi 1 juillet 2020 à 21:24

Le groupe chinois, frappé par des sanctions américaines, commercialise depuis ce printemps en Suisse un smartphone sans aucun service de Google. Pour son responsable national, les solutions alternatives trouvées par Huawei vont séduire le consommateur.

Est-il possible de vivre sans Google? Cette question, le groupe chinois Huawei se la pose depuis l’année passée, lorsque les premières sanctions commerciales américaines commençaient à le frapper. Cette interrogation est aussi celle du consommateur suisse: actuellement, le smartphone haut de gamme P40 de Huawei est vendu sans aucun service de Google et uniquement avec une version libre et édulcorée du système Android. Pas de magasin d’applications Play Store, pas d’app pour YouTube, Gmail, Maps ou encore GDrive. Il est uniquement possible d’accéder à ces services via le navigateur web – ce qui est peu pratique et n’offre aucune interaction entre les apps.

Pour un appareil vendu tout de même 999 francs par Sunrise, le client peut hésiter. C’est pour tenter de dissiper ces doutes que la firme chinoise lance une campagne de communication, en s’adjoignant notamment les services de son ambassadrice Christa Rigozzi, Miss Suisse 2006. Ce jeudi, c’est en sa compagnie que Steven Huang, directeur de Huawei pour la Suisse, reçoit les médias dans un palace de Lausanne. Quelques heures avant, Le Temps s’est entretenu avec lui pour évoquer les sanctions qui frappent sa société. Accusée par Washington de collusion avec le pouvoir chinois, Huawei ne peut plus utiliser les services de Google pour ses nouveaux téléphones.

Numéro trois en Suisse

Au niveau mondial, Huawei a talonné Samsung pour la place de numéro un sur le marché des smartphones au premier trimestre, avec 17,6% des ventes, contre 21,2% pour son rival sud-coréen et 14,3% pour Apple, selon la société de recherche Strategy Analytics. En mai, Huawei est même passé devant Samsung, selon le cabinet de consultants Counterpoint Research. «En Suisse, notre position demeure extrêmement solide, affirme Steven Huang. Nous sommes numéro trois, derrière Samsung et Apple, avec 11% de parts de marché, selon le cabinet de recherche GFK. Il n’y a aucune raison pour que nous reculions en Suisse, un marché important pour nous.»

Et pourtant, le modèle haut de gamme P40 est l’une des premières victimes de l’embargo américain – Sunrise y a apposé, sur son site, l’avertissement «sans services Google Mobile». Quant à Swisscom, il ne compte pas proposer ce modèle pour le moment. La société chinoise a été contrainte de développer les Huawei Mobile Services (HMS), sa propre boutique d’applications.

«Notre modèle P40 est très attractif, poursuit Steven Huang. C’est un téléphone 5G puissant, doté d’un très bon capteur photo. Et n’oubliez pas qu’il tourne avec une version open source d’Android. Via le système HMS, nous avons créé un écosystème d’applications très utiles, que ce soit pour des services de stockage dans le cloud, les galeries d’images, pour écouter de la musique ou simplement pour surfer sur internet.» La société est aussi fière de proposer le logiciel Petal Search, système permettant tant de trouver des apps que d’effectuer des recherches sur internet, en partenariat avec le moteur de recherche européen Qwant.

Avec UBS et les CFF

Huawei conçoit donc ses propres apps pour remplacer celles de Google. «Nous travaillons aussi étroitement avec des entreprises suisses telles que UBS, les CFF, la Banque Migros et TX Group pour rendre disponibles les principales apps suisses dans notre boutique», promet le responsable de Huawei. Mais malgré les moyens déployés par le groupe chinois, son magasin d’applications (environ 50 000 programmes) n’est en rien comparable avec ceux de Google et d’Apple, qui proposent chacun plus de 2 millions de programmes.

Steven Huang le reconnaît volontiers: «Le but n’est pas forcément de se passer de Google, mais d’offrir au client le choix. Plus de 5000 ingénieurs travaillent dur pour développer notre nouvel écosystème et aider les créateurs d’apps. Nous demeurons l’un des leaders sur le marché des smartphones. En avril, nous avons d’ailleurs été classé numéro un mondial. Nous ne sommes pas inquiets, nos clients non plus.»

L’énigme Harmony OS

Pas d’inquiétude en surface, donc, mais par prudence le groupe chinois développe depuis des mois son propre système d’exploitation pour mobile, baptisé Harmony OS. L’objectif, c’est d’imiter Apple, en concevant les téléphones, les applications et le système d’exploitation. Mais pour l’heure, Harmony OS n’a été déployé sur aucun smartphone. Il ne fonctionne que sur des téléviseurs. Et même si Huawei affirme qu’il peut le déployer rapidement, en cas de nécessité, sur des téléphones, la plupart des experts estiment que ce système n’est pas encore mûr – sans parler de la difficulté qu’il y aura à le faire accepter à des consommateurs occidentaux habitués au duopole constitué d’Android (Google) et d’iOS (Apple).

A noter que Steven Huang n’a pas souhaité s’exprimer sur la 5G, celle-ci n’étant pas sous sa supervision.

Huawei désigné comme menace pour la sécurité nationale américaine

La pression américaine contre Huawei se renforce. Mardi, la Federal Communications Commission (FCC), le gendarme américain des télécoms, a classé Huawei et son compatriote ZTE comme des menaces pour la sécurité nationale. Conséquence: les 8 milliards de dollars dont dispose chaque année la FCC pour son fonds de service universel ne pourront pas être utilisés pour acheter des équipements auprès de ces deux sociétés chinoises. Selon le président de la FCC, Ajit Pai, les deux sociétés «ont des liens étroits avec le Parti communiste chinois et l’appareil militaire chinois». Aucune preuve concernant ces accusations n’a été rendue publique par Washington.

Cette annonce intervient alors que le Royaume-Uni s’apprête à afficher une ligne plus dure envers Huawei. En janvier, Londres avait décidé d’interdire à ses opérateurs télécoms d’acheter des éléments dits «sensibles» pour les réseaux 5G auprès de la société chinoise. Les opérateurs ne devaient pas non plus acquérir, au total, plus de 35% de leurs équipements 5G auprès de Huawei. Cette semaine, plusieurs ministres anglais ont affirmé que des sanctions plus dures seraient bientôt décidées, sans être plus précis. Un bannissement total de Huawei pour la 5G est possible.

Une telle option n’est pas envisagée en Suisse, les autorités ayant donné, en 2019, le feu vert à la société chinoise pour qu’elle poursuive ses activités en Suisse. Huawei développe le réseau mobile de Sunrise, dont celui en 5G, et fournit des équipements à Swisscom pour son réseau fixe.
Pardon, humilité, humour, hasard, confiance, humanisme, partage, curiosité et diversité sont des gros piliers de la liberté et de la sérénité.

Diagnostiqué autiste en l'été 2014 :)

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Re: [Index] Libertés : pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

#1210 Message par ブノワ » mercredi 15 juillet 2020 à 16:18

Ah, ça y est on y est,
Le Conseil National du Numérique émet une recommandation pour mettre en oeuvre la facturation au volume sur le Web, le truc qui fait saliver tous les F.A.I. français depuis toujours.

https://www.numerama.com/tech/636216-ve ... ement.html

Quel bon moment que le confinement et le téléwork pour sortir cette vacherie en loucedé.

Ah, l'environnement, la "justice sociale", tous ces arguments bidons et faux pour faire payer quelque chose qui était gratuit avant. Quelle surprise sous un gouvernement comme celui ci. :sick:

P.S. Le président de l'ARCEP, qui m'a l'air très sympatique, à twitté une réponse avec le niveau d'argumentation adapté pour répondre à un tel "copinage":
https://twitter.com/sorianotech/status/ ... 4986351624
Identifié Aspie (広島, 08/10/31) Diagnostiqué (CRA MP 2009/12/18)

話したい誰かがいるってしあわせだ

Être Aspie, c'est soit une mauvaise herbe à éradiquer, soit une plante médicinale à qui il faut permettre de fleurir et essaimer.

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Re: [Index] Libertés : pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

#1211 Message par Tugdual » mercredi 15 juillet 2020 à 19:53

TCS = trouble de la communication sociale (24/09/2014).

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Re: [Index] Libertés : pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

#1212 Message par ブノワ » mercredi 15 juillet 2020 à 20:02

Je lis beaucoup de commentaires de type écolos ou du type donneurs de leçons contre les gens qui utilisent trop internet, bref si ça ne passe pas cette fois c'est tant mieux, mais j'ai l'impression que l'idée n'est plus unanimement rejetée comme avant. Et j'ai peur qu'ils n'aient fait que tenter le coup pour voir, ça reviendra...

(Le volet diminuer la "consommation électrique", je trouve que c' est une réelle arnaque quand on pense à toutes les études en place pour optimiser les flux et le stockage dans les DataCenters, les Points de présence et les caches pour précisemment diminuer les échanges, sans parler des processeurs basse conso qui sont de plus en plus présents).

J'adore aussi cette phrase malhonnête :
Cette suggestion, émise par le Conseil national du numérique (CNNum), une instance consultative chargée de nourrir la réflexion du gouvernement, consisterait à brider le débit des internautes, et non à couper l’accès, une fois épuisée une certaine enveloppe de données.
J'ai vécu dans un pays où ce genre de forfait est mis en place, comment dire, "brider le débit" ça veut dire passer en dessous de 56k, tu parles d'une "non-coupure d'accès".
Identifié Aspie (広島, 08/10/31) Diagnostiqué (CRA MP 2009/12/18)

話したい誰かがいるってしあわせだ

Être Aspie, c'est soit une mauvaise herbe à éradiquer, soit une plante médicinale à qui il faut permettre de fleurir et essaimer.

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Re: [Index] Libertés : pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

#1213 Message par Curiouser » vendredi 31 juillet 2020 à 14:38

A l'initiative de Mailo, une lettre ouverte adressée au secrétaire d'Etat chargé de la transition numérique et des communications électroniques, pour pousser un cri d'alarme au sujet des données numériques, et appeler à la création d'un label français :

Ne laissons plus les GAFA s'emparer des données européennes !
Pour obtenir ce cadre protecteur au niveau de l'UE, utilisons la même méthode concrète que pour la taxe GAFA : commençons par la France, donnons l'exemple en Europe par des dispositions courageuses. C'est dans cet esprit que nous vous appelons, Monsieur le Ministre, à créer un label « NSF » (« Numérique Souveraineté France ») décerné aux services internet français vraiment respectueux de nos données personnelles. Ce label devra s'obtenir selon 4 critères essentiels : le premier est le respect des réglementations françaises en matière de données personnelles. Le second est l'hébergement en France des données des internautes français utilisant le service. Le troisième est que la maison mère de l'éditeur du service paye ses impôts en France. Le quatrième est de ne pas être contraint par une législation étrangère sur le sol français (comme le CLOUD Act). La mise en place sans tarder à l'échelle nationale du label « NSF » doit préfigurer la mise en place d'un « NSE » (« Numérique Souveraineté Europe ») qui devra suivre au plus vite.
Diagnostiquée TSA en janvier 2021. Conjoint diagnostiqué TSA en octobre 2020.

Site : Tout Sur l'Autisme (ressources et documents)

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Re: [Index] Libertés : pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

#1214 Message par ブノワ » vendredi 31 juillet 2020 à 14:54

Ca ne fait pas très "naturel", Numérique Souveraineté France, on dirait presque qu'ils voulaient rajouter "Web" à la fin pour indiquer de quoi ça parle mais n'ont pas osé.

Parce que clairement, l'acronyme pour "Numérique Souveraineté France Web" aurait eu accès d'emblée à une énorme popularité.
Spoiler : 
NSFW
Identifié Aspie (広島, 08/10/31) Diagnostiqué (CRA MP 2009/12/18)

話したい誰かがいるってしあわせだ

Être Aspie, c'est soit une mauvaise herbe à éradiquer, soit une plante médicinale à qui il faut permettre de fleurir et essaimer.

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Re: [Index] Libertés : pour parler des libertés, y compris numériques...

#1215 Message par ブノワ » samedi 1 août 2020 à 18:28

Dans le genre flicage à la con, il faut maintenant que je crypte les données quand je veux copier du code entre mon pc bureautique et mon Pc de dev.
Tout ça avec une appli de chie qui est bien moins userfriendly que 7zip.
Fait chier. :evil:

Je suis forcé de faire ça parce que j ai des instances qui n ont pas le droit de sortir du Pc bureautique.
Identifié Aspie (広島, 08/10/31) Diagnostiqué (CRA MP 2009/12/18)

話したい誰かがいるってしあわせだ

Être Aspie, c'est soit une mauvaise herbe à éradiquer, soit une plante médicinale à qui il faut permettre de fleurir et essaimer.

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