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  • Connecticut legislators to consider minimum pay for Uber and Lyft drivers - Connecticut Post
    https://www.ctpost.com/politics/article/Connecticut-legislators-to-consider-minimum-pay-13608071.php

    By Emilie Munson, February 11, 2019 - Prompted by growing numbers of frustrated Uber and Lyft drivers, lawmakers will hold a hearing on establishing minimum pay for app-based drivers.

    After three separate legislative proposals regarding pay for drivers flooded the Labor and Public Employees Committee, the committee will raise the concept of driver earnings as a bill, said state Rep. Robyn Porter, D-New Haven, who chairs the committee, on Friday night.

    A coalition of Uber and Lyft drivers from New Haven has been pressuring lawmakers to pass a pay standard, following New York City’s landmark minimum pay ordinance for app-based drivers approved in December. The legislation, which set an earnings floor of $17.22 an hour for the independent contractors, took effect on Feb. 1.

    Connecticut drivers have no minimum pay guarantees.

    Guillermo Estrella, who drives for Uber, worked about 60 hours per week last year and received $25,422.65 in gross pay. His pay stub doesn’t reflect how much Estrella paid for insurance, gas, oil changes and wear-and-tear on his car. Factor those expenses in, and the Branford resident said his yearly take-home earnings were about $18,000 last year.

    Estrella and other New Haven drivers have suggested bill language to cap the portion of riders’ fares that Uber and Lyft can take at 25 percent, with the remaining 75 percent heading to drivers’ pockets. The idea has already received pushback from Uber, which said it was unrealistic given their current pay structure.

    Connecticut legislators have suggested two other models for regulating driver pay. State Sen. Steve Cassano, D-Manchester, filed a bill to set a minimum pay rate per mile and per minute for drivers. His bill has not assigned numbers to those minimums yet.

    “What (drivers) were making when Uber started and got its name, they are not making that anymore,” said Cassano. “The company is taking advantage of the success of the company. I understand that to a point, but it shouldn’t be at the expense of the drivers.”

    State Rep. Peter Tercyak, D-New Britain, proposed legislation that says if drivers’ earnings do not amount to hourly minimum wage payments, Uber or Lyft should have to kick in the difference. Connecticut’s minimum wage is now $10.10, although Democrats are making a strong push this year to raise it.

    As lawmakers consider these proposals, they will confront issues raised by the growing “gig economy”: a clash between companies seeking thousands of flexible, independent contractors and a workforce that wants the benefits and rights of traditional, paid employment.

    Some Democrats at the Capitol support the changes that favor drivers.

    “I thought it was important to make sure our labor laws are keeping up with the changes we are seeing in this emerging gig economy, that we have sufficient safeguards to make sure that drivers are not being exploited,” said Sen. Matt Lesser, D-Middletown.

    But the proposals also raise broad, difficult questions like what protections does a large independent contractor workforce need? And how would constraining the business model of Uber and Lyft impact service availability around the state?

    Sen. Craig Miner, a Republican of Litchfield who sits on the Labor committee, wondered why Uber and Lyft drivers should have guaranteed pay, when other independent contractors do not. How would this impact the tax benefits realized by independent contractors, he asked.

    Uber and Lyft declined to provide data on how many drivers they have in the state, and the Connecticut Department of Motor Vehicles does not keep count. In Connecticut, 82 percent of Lyft drivers drive fewer than 20 hours per week, said Kaelan Richards, a Lyft spokesperson.

    Last week, Hearst Connecticut Media spoke to 20 Uber and Lyft drivers in New Haven who are demanding lawmakers protect their pay. All drove full-time for Uber or Lyft or both.

    An immigrant from Ecuador, Estrella, the Branford driver, struggles to pay for rent and groceries for his pregnant wife and seven-year-old son using his Uber wages.

    “A cup of coffee at the local Starbucks cost $3 or $4,” said Estrella. “How can a trip can cost $3 when you have to drive to them five minutes away and drop them off after seven or eight minutes?”

    In December, 50 Uber and Lyft drivers held a strike in New Haven demanding better pay. The New Haven drivers last week said they are planning more strikes soon.

    “Why is Uber lowering the rates and why do we have to say yes to keep working?” asked Carlos Gomez, a Guilford Uber driver, last week.

    The drivers believe Uber and Lyft are decreasing driver pay and taking a larger chunk of rider fares for company profits. Many New Haven drivers said pay per mile has been decreasing. They liked Sen. Cassano’s idea of setting minimum pay per mile and per minute.

    “The payment by mile, it went down by 10 cents,” said Rosanna Olan, a driver from West Haven. “Before it was more than one dollar and now when you have a big truck SUV, working long distance especially is not worth it anymore.”

    Uber and Lyft both declined to provide pay rates per mile and per minute for drivers. Drivers are not paid for time spent driving to pick up a passenger, nor for time spent idling waiting for a ride, although the companies’ model depends on having drivers ready to pick up passengers at any moment.

    Lyft said nationally drivers earn an average of $18.83 an hour, but did not provide Connecticut specific earnings.

    “Our goal has always been to empower drivers to get the most out of Lyft, and we look forward to continBy Emilie Munson Updated 4:49 pm EST, Monday, February 11, 2019uing to do so in Connecticut, and across the country," said Rich Power, public policy manager at Lyft.

    Uber discouraged lawmakers from considering the drivers’ proposal of capping the transportation companies’ cut of rider fares. Uber spokesman Harry Hartfield said the idea wouldn’t work because Uber no longer uses the “commission model” — that stopped about two years ago.

    “In order to make sure we can provide customers with an up-front price, driver fares are not tied to what the rider pays,” said Hartfield. “In fact, on many trips drivers actually make more money than the rider pays.”

    What the rider is pays to Uber is an estimated price, calculated before the ride starts, Hartfield explained, while the driver receives from Uber a fare that is calculated based on actual drive time and distance. Changing the model could make it hard to give customers up-front pricing and “lead to reduced price transparency,” Hartfield said. New York’s changes raised rates for riders.

    James Bhandary-Alexander, a New Haven Legal Assistance attorney who is working with the drivers, said Uber’s current pay model is “irrelevant to how drivers want to be paid for the work.”

    “The reason that drivers care is it seems fundamentally unfair that the rider is willing to pay or has paid $100 for the ride and the driver has only gotten $30 or $40 of that,” he said.

    Pursuing any of the three driver-pay proposals would bring Uber and Lyft lobbyists back to the Capitol, where they negotiated legislation spearheaded by Rep. Sean Scanlon, D-Guilford, from 2015 to 2017.

    Scanlon said the companies eventually favored the bill passed in 2017, which, after some compromise, required drivers have insurance, limited “surge pricing,” mandated background checks for drivers, imposed a 25 cent tax collected by the state and stated passengers must be picked up and delivered anywhere without discrimination.

    “One of my biggest regrets about that bill, which I think is really good for consumers in Connecticut, is that we didn’t do anything to try to help the driver,” said Scanlon, who briefly drove for Uber.
    By Emilie Munson Updated 4:49 pm EST, Monday, February 11, 2019
    emunson@hearstmediact.com; Twitter: @emiliemunson

    #USA #Uber #Connecticut #Mindestlohn #Klassenkampf

  • Abiturdurchschnitt 2019: 2,4 - Senatorin Scheeres gratuliert zum bestandenen Abitur - Berlin.de
    https://www.berlin.de/sen/bjf/service/presse/pressearchiv-2019/pressemitteilung.821861.php

    Lustig: Im Tagesspiegle gibt es Freie Schulen , in der Auflistung des Senats heißen die Schulen in freier Trägerschaft . Vor drei Jahren waren das noch Privatschulen . Solche klaren Worte vermeidet jeder gerne, der von der Tatsache ablenken möchte, dass die Existenz solcher vom Geldbeutel der Eltern abhängiger Schulen ein Fremdkörper in einem Schulsystem darstellt, dass Chancengleichheit als erste Maxime vor sich herträgt. Auch fällt auf, dass 2019 das Französische Gymnasium nicht in der Liste der besten öffentlichen Gymnasien erscheint. Ist der Abischnitt dieses Jahr so mies ausgefallen, oder liegt es daran, das dort die Sommerferien erst am 1. Juli beginnen, und Mitte Juni noch keine Ergebnisse vorlagen?

    Pressemitteilung vom 21.06.2019
    Die Berliner Abiturientinnen und Abiturienten können auch in diesem Jahr stolz auf ihre Leistungen sein. Wie die Schnellauswertung der Abiturdaten zeigt, erreichten die Schülerinnen und Schüler wie in den vergangenen acht Jahren wieder einen Abiturdurchschnitt von 2,4. Auch der Anteil derjenigen, die das Abitur bestanden haben, ist mit mehr als 95% sehr erfreulich. 4,6 % der Prüflinge haben nicht bestanden, etwas weniger als vor einem Jahr (5%). Insgesamt haben in diesem Jahr 14.866 Schüler und Schülerinnen die Prüfung abgelegt. In die Schnellauswertung sind die Daten von 13.013 Prüflingen eingegangen (87,5 %). Von diesen Prüflingen haben 260 einen Notendurchschnitt von 1,0 und 154 einen Schnitt von 1,1 erreicht.

    Abiturnoten im Überblick: Das sind Berlins beste Schnitte - Berlin - Tagesspiegel Mobil
    https://www.tagesspiegel.de/berlin/abiturnoten-im-ueberblick-das-sind-berlins-beste-schnitte/24481906.html

    Öffentliche Gymnasien

    Heinrich-Hertz-Gymnasium (1,76), Otto-Nagel-Gymnasium (1,81), Rosa-Luxemburg-Gymnasium (1,82), G.-F.-Händel- Gymnasium (1,88), Werner-v.-Siemens- Gymnasium (1,9), Beethoven-Gymnasium (1,97), Heinz-Berggruen-Gymnasium (2,0), Schadow-Gymnasium (2,01), P.-Natorp-Gymnasium (2,05), Johann- Gottfried-Herder-Gymnasium (2,07).

    Öffentliche Sekundarschulen

    John-F.-Kennedy-Schule (1,91), Nelson-Mandela-Schule (2,01), Flatow-Oberschule (2,03), Sportschule im Olympiapark/Poelchau-Schule (2,23), Sophie-Scholl-Schule (2,32), Martin-Buber-Schule (2,32), Schul- und Leistungssportzentrum Berlin (2,37), Kurt-Tucholsky-Oberschule (2,38), Kurt-Schwitters-Schule (2,42), Gustav-Heinemann-Schule (2,45).

    Freie Schulen

    Berlin Cosmopolitan School (1,39), Berlin Bilingual School (1,63), Ev. Gymnasium zum Grauen Kloster (1,76), Kath. Theresienschule (Gymnasium; 1,86), Canisius-Kolleg (Gymnasium; 1,88), Moser-Schule (Gymnasium; 1,96), Bilinguale Schule Phorms Berlin Mitte (2,0), Kath. Schule Salvator (2,03), Ev. Schule Köpenick (Gymnasium; 2,14), Kath. Schule Liebfrauen (2,23).

    Berufliche Gymnasien

    Elinor-Ostrom-Schule (2,21), Staatl. Ballettschule und Schule für Artistik (2,26), Rahel- Hirsch-Schule (2,29), Max-Bill-Schule (2,47), Anna-Freud-Oberschule (2,51), Jane-Addams-Schule (2,57), Emil-Fischer-Schule (2,59), OSZ TIEM (2,59), Lise-Meitner-Schule (2,65), Max-Taut- Schule (2,66).

    Kollegs und Abendgymnasien

    Kolleg Schöneberg (2,14), Victor-Klemperer-Kolleg (2,2), Treptow-Kolleg (2,2), Charlotte- Wolff-Kolleg (2,35), Berlin-Kolleg (2,4).

    Und in den Vorjahren ...

    Abiturdurchschnitt 2018: 2,4 - Berlin.de
    https://www.berlin.de/sen/bjf/service/presse/pressearchiv-2018/pressemitteilung.720267.php

    Schulen mit bestem Notenschnitt und Anzahl bestandener Prüflinge nach Schulform

    Schulname Notendurchschnitt bestandene Prüfung

    Berufliche Gymnasien

    1. Rahel-Hirsch-Schule OSZ Gesundheit/Medizin 2,29 94
    2. Staatliche Ballettschule Berlin und Schule für Artistik 2,29 12
    3. Jane-Addams-Schule (OSZ Sozialwesen) 2,45 120
    4. Max-Bill-Schule (OSZ Bau- und Holztechnik) 2,47 152
    5. Anna-Freud-Oberschule (OSZ Sozialwesen) 2,50 147
    6. Emil-Fischer-Schule (OSZ Ernährung und Lebensmitteltechnik) 2,54 98
    7. Lise-Meitner-Schule (OSZ Chemie, Physik und Biologie) 2,56 75
    8. Hermann-Scheer-Schule (OSZ Wirtschaft) 2,68 74
    9. OSZ Logistik, Touristik und Steuern 2,69 80
    10. Wilhelm-Ostwald-Schule (OSZ für Gestaltung) 2,69 20

    Gymnasien

    1. Französisches Gymnasium 1,67 48
    2. Heinrich-Hertz-Gymnasium 1,83 53
    3. Georg-Friedrich-Händel-Gymnasium 1,89 73
    4. Rosa-Luxemburg-Gymnasium 1,90 137
    5. Arndt-Gymnasium Dahlem 1,94 113
    6. Otto-Nagel-Gymnasium 1,95 84
    7. Heinz-Berggruen-Gymnasium 1,96 131
    8. Beethoven-Gymnasium 1,98 141
    9. Gymnasium Steglitz 2,00 94
    10. Paul-Natorp-Gymnasium 2,04 107

    Integrierte Sekundarschule

    1. John-F.-Kennedy-Schule 1,93 87
    2. Nelson-Mandela-Schule 1,97 63
    3. Sportschule im Olympiapark/ Poelchau-Schule 2,21 55
    4. Schul- und Leistungssportzentrum Berlin (Sportforum) 2,32 87
    5. Martin-Buber-Oberschule (Integrierte Sekundarschule) 2,32 129
    6. Friedensburg-Schule 2,35 81
    7. Gustav-Heinemann-Oberschule 2,36 101
    8. Flatow-Oberschule 2,36 27
    9. Sophie-Scholl-Schule 2,36 154
    10. Kurt-Schwitters-Schule 2,50 88
    11. Fritz-Karsen-Schule (Gemeinschaftsschule) 2,50 75

    Schulen in freier Trägerschaft

    1. Jüdische Traditionsschule 1,37 6
    2. Berlin Cosmopolitan School 1,72 5
    3. Evangelische Schule Frohnau 1,73 77
    4. Evangelisches Gymnasium zum Grauen Kloster 1,78 69
    5. Canisius-Kolleg (Gymnasium) 1,83 86
    6. Katholische Theresienschule (Gymnasium) 1,86 58
    7. Bilinguale Schule Phorms Berlin Süd 1,88 5
    8. Moser-Schule (Gymnasium) 1,95 44
    9. Evangelische Schule Köpenick (Gymnasium) 2,01 71
    10. Bilinguale Schule Phorms Berlin Mitte 2,03 30

    Kollegs/Abendgymnasien

    1. Abendgymnasium Prenzlauer Berg 2,11 25
    2. Victor-Klemperer-Kolleg 2,22 67
    3. Berlin-Kolleg 2,23 106
    4. Treptow-Kolleg 2,23 74
    5. Kolleg Schöneberg 2,26 52
    6. Charlotte-Wolff-Kolleg 2,37 51
    7. Peter-A.-Silbermann-Schule 2,38 19

    Abiturdurchschnitt 2017: 2,4 Senatorin Scheeres gratuliert zum bestandenen Abitur - Berlin.de
    https://www.berlin.de/sen/bjf/service/presse/pressearchiv-2017/pressemitteilung.612503.php

    Schulen mit bestem Notenschnitt und Anzahl bestandener Prüflinge nach Schulform

    Schulname, Abiturschnitt | Prüflinge

    Berufliche Gymnasien

    1. Staatliche Ballettschule Berlin und Schule für Artistik, 2,09 | 15
    2. Jane-Addams-Schule (OSZ Sozialwesen), 2,28 | 126
    3. Marcel-Breuer-Schule (OSZ Holztechnik), 2,33 | 95
    4. Rahel-Hirsch-Schule OSZ Gesundheit/Medizin, 2,42 | 50
    5. Emil-Fischer-Schule (OSZ Ernährung und Lebensmitteltechnik), 2,45 | 66
    6. Lise-Meitner-Schule (OSZ Chemie, Physik und Biologie), 2,48 | 67
    7. Anna-Freud-Oberschule (OSZ Sozialwesen), 2,48 | 128
    8. Hans-Litten-Schule, 2,56 | 45
    9. Max-Taut-Schule (OSZ Gebäude-Umwelt-Technik), 2,56 | 30
    10. OSZ TIEM (Technische Informatik, Industrieelektronik und Energiemanagement), 2,62 | 44

    Gymnasien

    1. Georg-Friedrich-Händel-Gymnasium, 1,81 | 60
    2. Heinrich-Hertz-Gymnasium, 1,85 | 66
    3. Gymnasium Steglitz, 1,85 | 107
    4. Arndt-Gymnasium Dahlem, 1,90 | 112
    5. Französisches Gymnasium, 1,92 | 57
    6. Heinz-Berggruen-Gymnasium, 1,93 |105
    7. Rosa-Luxemburg-Gymnasium, 1,98 | 121
    8. Johann-Gottfried-Herder-Oberschule, 1,99 | 94
    9. Beethoven-Gymnasium, 2,01 | 147
    10. Schadow-Gymnasium, 2,01 | 128

    Integrierte Sekundarschulen

    1. John-F.-Kennedy-Schule, 1,96 | 84
    2. . Nelson-Mandela-Schule, 2,00 | 59
    3. Sophie-Scholl-Schule, 2,24 |119
    4. Schul- und Leistungssportzentrum Berlin (Sportforum), 2,28 | 76
    5. Sportschule im Olympiapark/ Poelchau-Schule, 2,29 | 40
    6. Gustav-Heinemann-Oberschule, 2,30 | 145
    7. Kurt-Schwitters-Schule, 2,36 | 92
    8. Flatow-Oberschule, 2,36 | 39
    9. Martin-Buber-Oberschule (Integrierte Sekundarschule), 2,39 | 122
    10. Margarethe-von-Witzleben-Schule, 2,43 | 7

    Privatschulen

    1. Klax Sekundarschule (Integrierte Sekundarschule), 1,50 | 2
    2. Evangelische Schule Frohnau, 1,66 | 66
    3. Moser-Schule (Gymnasium), 1,70 | 42
    4. Canisius-Kolleg (Gymnasium), 1,81 | 69
    5. Evangelisches Gymnasium zum Grauen Kloster, 1,86 | 76
    6. Katholische Theresienschule (Gymnasium), 1,88 | 86
    7. Berlin Cosmopolitan School, 1,92 | 9
    8. Bilinguale Schule Phorms Berlin Mitte, 2,01 | 29
    9. Evangelische Schule Köpenick (Gymnasium), 2,04 | 87
    10. Katholische Schule Liebfrauen, 2,15 | 93

    Kollegs/Abendgymnasien

    1. Abendgymnasium Prenzlauer Berg, 2,12 | 35
    2. Charlotte-Wolff-Kolleg, 2,19 | 47
    3. Victor-Klemperer-Kolleg, 2,22 | 66
    4. Treptow-Kolleg, 2,27 | 72
    5. Kolleg Schöneberg, 2,31 | 66
    6. Peter-A.-Silbermann-Schule, 2,36 | 14
    7. Berlin-Kolleg, 2,40 | 102

    #Berlin #Schule

  • Viols à distance en streaming : un Français jugé pour complicité d’agressions sexuelles - Le Parisien
    http://www.leparisien.fr/faits-divers/viols-a-distance-en-streaming-un-francais-juge-pour-complicite-d-agressio

    Derrière son ordinateur, il tentait d’assouvir ses sordides fantasmes. Mais Stéphane L., renvoyé le 23 mai devant le tribunal correctionnel, ne se contentait pas d’agir en spectateur passif. Le pilote de ligne de 50 ans, domicilié en région parisienne, s’était tourné vers une forme d’exploitation sexuelle des enfants en plein essor : le live-streaming. Ou comment des Français commandent, sur Internet, des viols d’enfants diffusés en direct par des hommes où des femmes qui appliquent à la lettre les instructions des commanditaires.

    En 2010, un agent infiltré du FBI, explique avoir reçu de la part d’un certain « Benjibenji028 » des images explicites d’enfants. Il s’agit de Stéphane L. Les enquêteurs de l’Office central pour la répression des violences aux personnes (OCRVP) sondent les comptes en banque du suspect. Ils découvrent qu’il a effectué des dizaines de virements – en général 30 euros - à des femmes installées aux Philippines. Interpellé le 12 août 2014 à son hôtel parisien, Stéphane L. n’est alors que le deuxième français impliqué dans une affaire de live-streaming. Il plonge les enquêteurs dans un monde où des enfants sont violés pour quelques dizaines d’euros.

    Il donne des instructions à la « réalisatrice »

    L’exploitation des ordinateurs de Stéphane L. permet aux policiers de découvrir de sordides conversations sur Skype. « Le contenu […] démontre qu’il a bénéficié de shows pédopornographiques […] et qu’il donnait des instructions afin que des fillettes se soumettent à des attouchements de nature sexuelle par un adulte », écrit la juge d’instruction dans son ordonnance de renvoi. Dans une discussion datée du 27 octobre 2013, Stéphane L. demande par exemple à une femme – violeuse sur commande - de pénétrer une enfant avec ses doigts. Une fillette dont l’âge – 8 ans ! - est clairement évoquée par la « réalisatrice » de ce show en live. « Super, j’aime cet âge », s’enthousiasme l’ancien pilote de l’armée de l’air décrivant par le menu et avec des mots très crus ce qu’il souhaite voir infliger à la fillette.

    LIRE AUSSI >L’inquiétant phénomène des viols à distance

    Une fois devant la juge pourtant, Stéphane L. minimise son implication. Il explique ne jamais avoir donné d’ordre, et avoir même souvent versé de l’argent pour rien. Quant aux quelques prestations auxquelles il a pu assister, cela n’avait rien d’un viol, se défend-il. « Elle simulait… Par exemple, au lieu de mettre un doigt, elle courbait le doigt pour que l’on croie qu’il y avait une pénétration alors qu’il n’y en avait pas ». Des dénégations qui compliquent fortement le travail de la justice, qui ne dispose pas d’enregistrements de ces prestations réalisées en direct.
    Une fillette entraînée depuis ses 3 ans…

    D’ailleurs, contre l’avis du parquet de Paris qui souhaitait un procès aux assises, la juge, qui n’a pas pu « démontrer la réalité d’un acte de pénétration », a décidé de renvoyer Stéphane L. devant le tribunal correctionnel. Il sera, avant la fin de l’année, le premier Français jugé pour « complicité d’agressions sexuelles » dans un dossier de live-streaming. « Jusque-là, les auteurs de ces infractions étaient uniquement condamnés pour consultation d’images pédopornographiques », souligne Ludivine Piron, chargée de mission à l’Ecpat, association qui lutte contre l’exploitation sexuelle des enfants. « Nous aurions préféré un procès aux assises, mais cela reste un progrès significatif », appuie Me Emmanuel Daoud, l’avocat de l’Ecpat.

    Pour l’association, ce procès devra montrer le « véritable business derrière ces viols en direct ». Un gagne-pain familial parfois, à l’image de cette femme contactée par Stéphane L. qui mettait en scène sa fille. Une situation déjà entrevue en Roumanie. « Mais le live-streaming est aussi l’œuvre de réseaux mafieux, souligne Ludivine Piron. C’est un marché très lucratif, avec des enfants réduits en esclavage. » Le 11 août 2014, une Philippine explique ainsi à Stéphane L. « entraîner » une petite fille de 11 ans à réaliser de telles prestations « depuis ses trois ans »…

    Ce militaire n’est pas le complice, c’est le commanditaire des viols et c’est pas une agression sexuelle c’est un pédo-viol avec préméditation et en bande organisée.
    #viol #correctionnalisation #pedocriminalité #pornographie

    • Viols à distance en streaming : «Un phénomène exponentiel»
      http://www.leparisien.fr/faits-divers/viols-a-distance-en-streaming-un-phenomene-exponentiel-17-06-2019-8095494

      Des enfants de moins de 10 ans violés en direct pour le plaisir d’Occidentaux cachés derrière leur ordinateur. Et pour un montant dérisoire : environ 50 dollars l’agression. Phénomène inquiétant, le live-streaming préoccupe magistrats et policiers depuis un peu plus de quatre ans. 7 dossiers sont actuellement entre les mains des enquêteurs spécialisés, 17 ont été traités depuis 2016. « Mais le phénomène est exponentiel, souligne le commissaire divisionnaire Philippe Guichard, patron de l’Office central de répression des violences aux personnes (OCRVP). Je crains que nous arrivions rapidement à plus de 90 Français impliqués dans ces faits abjects. »

      Preuve de l’engagement des autorités à circonscrire ce fléau, Jérôme Bonet, directeur central de la police judiciaire et Philippe Guichard ouvriront, ce mardi à Singapour, un séminaire international dédié notamment au live-streaming. « L’objectif est d’éviter que ce phénomène apparu aux Philippines ne gangrène davantage de pays pauvres, détaille le commissaire Guichard. Il est vital de mettre en place des collaborations internationales. » Car ces dossiers, dont certains concernent l’Europe de l’Est, sont épineux.

      Multiplier les partenariats avec les autorités locales

      Très souvent, l’implication de ressortissants français est signalée à l’OCRVP grâce aux services de police étrangers, notamment américains. Tracfin ou Western Union ont aussi pris l’habitude d’alerter les policiers sur les mouvements de fonds suspects : l’île de Cebu, région pauvre des Philippes, concentre nombre de transactions. Ces hommes « de tous les profils » sont alors traqués sur Internet. « Mais les enquêtes sont difficiles, note Philippe Guichard. Comme nous n’avons pas d’accord judiciaire avec les Philippines, nous ne pouvons entendre ni les victimes ni les auteurs directs des viols. Les investigations se concentrent alors sur les supports numériques saisis chez les commanditaires français. »

      Reste que la justice peine jusque-là à obtenir des condamnations exemplaires. Ainsi, à Grenoble, un internaute mis en examen pour complicité de viols a finalement été condamné à deux ans de prison pour la simple « détention d’images pédopornographiques ». « Juridiquement, donner des instructions pour commettre un viol sur un mineur, c’est de la complicité de viol et cela doit être jugé devant une cour d’assises, plaide Aude Groualle, cheffe de la section des mineurs au parquet de Paris, qui sera représentée à Singapour. La difficulté tient au principe même du live-streaming, avec une vidéo en direct qu’il est difficile pour nous de récupérer. »

      La justice peine donc à matérialiser les viols, malgré des écrits sans équivoque. « Au parquet de Paris, notre position est claire, prévient Aude Groualle. Si nous avons des éléments permettant d’établir qu’il y a eu des instructions pour un viol, nous qualifions cela de complicité de viol. Pour parvenir à renvoyer des mis en cause devant la cour d’assises, nous devons multiplier les partenariats avec les autorités locales afin de retrouver les violeurs et les victimes. »

  • Terrain Vague : assigning value to ambiguous space | Thinkpiece | Architectural Review

    https://www.architectural-review.com/essays/terrain-vague-assigning-value-to-ambiguous-space/10042658.article

    Paywall mais vous réglez le problème en utilisant la navigation privée

    The body politic gaily riding roughshod over our built and natural environment needs to be reined in

    If you keep going west down Foyle Hill from Shaftesbury you’ll come to Stock Gaylard, Pleck, and King’s Stag – marvellous names, the last of which occurs in Thomas Hardy’s even more marvellous ballad A Trampwoman’s Tragedy. Hardy died almost a century ago. His shade would happily recognise Foyle Hill, which is unchanged and unusual, not merely in that stasis but in the peculiarity of its disposition. It is a narrow unclassified road flanked by verges wider than it is. Verges that are hardly tended though not neglected. The Blackmore Vale is sumptuously rich pasture and land values are commensurately high. Yet here is land of manifestly undefined purpose, left uncultivated and ungrazed. To call land workshy is to submit to the pathetic fallacy, but such an adjective seems apt. There is a lazy ease here, just as there is in the hamlet name Pleck, which signifies not a village, not a hamlet but a ‘spot’, a place that hasn’t been got at, that no one has bothered to improve, that has not been subjected to the least regeneration. In France the convention is to call such non-places lieux-dits. For example, Lieu-dit Olivier. Even though the Oliviers are long gone and there isn’t even a trace of the house they lived in, the non-place is lent a vestige of identity, is relieved of total anonymity. Nonetheless, named or not (usually not), these places – edgelands or terrains vagues, spots – are too-readily written off as waste land, an epithet that suggests a failure to fulfil their destiny, find a proper role.

    #architecture #aménagement_urbain #urban_matter #espace_intersticiels #dfs #logo #no_logo

  • Culture du viol, culture du déni
    https://www.liberation.fr/checknews/2019/05/17/la-scene-dans-laquelle-nicolas-gregoire-se-met-en-scene-dans-son-livre-es

    Bonjour,

    Vous nous avez saisis sur Twitter au sujet d’un passage du livre de l’ancien journaliste Nicolas Grégoire. L’auteur, qui a travaillé à l’UDF de 1996 à 1997 affirme depuis 2017 avoir été rémunéré comme assistant parlementaire alors qu’il travaillait en réalité pour le parti. Malgré ses nombreuses relances auprès de journalistes, l’affaire n’a été couverte que par le Télégramme. Depuis, il accuse les médias (dont Libération) de censure et d’avoir voulu étouffer l’histoire. Checknews avait déjà répondu une question sur le sujet.

    Il raconte donc son histoire dans un livre, auto-édité « pour échapper à la censure et aux pressions ». La première partie a été mise en ligne gratuitement. Christophe Cécil-Garnier, journaliste pour Street Press et auteur, en 2017, d’un portrait de Nicolas Grégoire dans Slate, écrit le premier, jeudi soir, que Nicolas Grégoire y décrit une scène de viol, sans qualifier ses actes.

    C’est avec "la blonde" qu’arrive ce passage.

    Nicolas Grégoire, même s’il dit en avoir honte, ne nomme pas les choses : c’est un viol.

    Ne pas le nommer tel quel, ne pas le prendre en compte, ça s’appelle la culture du viol. pic.twitter.com/wPqlFDVHOx
    — Christophe-C Garnier (@ChrisCGarnier) 16 mai 2019

    L’auteur, lui, dément faire l’apologie du viol dans ce passage, et assure que la scène qu’il décrit n’est pas un viol.

    D’ailleurs, quand je me décris comme menteur et voleur, c’est aussi de l’apologie ? Non, subitement, c’est de la sincérité !

    Mais revenons au passage en question. J’ai demandé à des juristes. Personne ne m’a dit que, selon le Code pénal, c’était du viol. Mais peu importe.
    — Nicolas Grégoire (@nicolasgregoire) 16 mai 2019

    C’est faux, ce n’est pas un viol. Et si c’était un viol, je l’aurait écrit ! Et je me serais dénoncé moi-même !

    Je dénonce un comportement, et on me traîne dans la boue comme si j’en faisais l’apologie, sur des bases fausses, c’est absolument insupportable.
    — Nicolas Grégoire (@nicolasgregoire) 16 mai 2019

    Plusieurs juristes ont réagi, expliquant au contraire que les faits décrits relevaient effectivement du viol.

    Le viol se définit comme un acte de pénétration sexuelle (ça ne fait aucun doute), par contrainte, menace, violence ou surprise. Ici il s’agit de surprise.
    — secret (@jjalmad) 16 mai 2019

    L’article 222-23 du code pénal punit le viol de quinze ans de prison. Il définit le viol comme « tout acte de pénétration sexuelle, de quelque nature qu’il soit, commis sur la personne d’autrui ou sur la personne de l’auteur par violence, contrainte, menace ou surprise ». Dans l’extrait en question, il est bien écrit que sa conjointe est endormie, « les yeux mi-clos, du ton geignard de ceux qu’on réveille », ce qui relève de la surprise, et qu’elle n’est pas consentante puisqu’elle répète à trois reprises : « Non…, non, non ». Par ailleurs, lorsqu’il est commis par le conjoint ou concubin, le viol est passible de 20 ans de réclusion.

    Si le livre est présenté comme un récit factuel, rien ne permet pour autant d’affirmer que la scène décrite s’est réellement passée. Les faits, censés s’être déroulés il y a plus de 20 ans, seraient prescrits.

    Sur Twitter, la police nationale a expliqué avoir été saisie via la plateforme de signalement pharos.

    Bonjour, les enquêteurs de la plateforme #Pharos ont été saisis. Merci pour votre vigilance. Pour signaler des contenus illicites sur le web, rendez-vous sur la plateforme #Pharos : https://t.co/cC9MlFxtoq pic.twitter.com/nrvvIEOfVw
    — Police nationale (@PoliceNationale) 17 mai 2019

    L’auteur a accusé les médias de se servir de cet extrait pour allumer un contre-feu.

    Comme pour le Bayrougate, désespérés que j’aie toutes les preuves, journalistes et politiques mis en cause m’attaquent sur ma personne.

    Contre-feu lâche et malheureusement efficace. Mais je ne lâcherai pas.#PasAvantLeDeuxiemeTour
    — Nicolas Grégoire (@nicolasgregoire) 17 mai 2019

    Rappelons par ailleurs que, quelques jours plus tôt, sous un tweet annonçant la réouverture de l’enquête sur Julian Assange ce même Nicolas Grégoire affirmait que l’accusation de viol contre le fondateur de Wikileaks ne tenait pas parce qu’il n’y avait « pas eu contrainte ». Or, dans ce cas aussi, la plaignante accuse Assange d’avoir engagé un rapport sexuel sans préservatif alors qu’elle dormait.

    Non, ce n’est pas un viol, parce qu’il n’y a pas eu contrainte.

    — Nicolas Grégoire (@nicolasgregoire) 13 mai 2019

    Mise à jour vendredi 17 mai à 18h15 : Dans un communiqué, Nicolas Grégoire est revenu sur le récit décrit dans son livre, affirmant que la femme était éveillée et consentante.
    Pauline Moullot

    #viol #consentement #domination_masculine #violences_par_conjoint #déni #hypocrisie

  • Pakistan : des insurgés baloutches visent les intérêts chinois à #Gwadar
    https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2019/05/13/pakistan-des-insurges-baloutches-visent-les-interets-chinois-a-gwadar_546151


    Des forces de sécurité pakistanaises patrouillent dans le port de Gwadar, à 700 km à l’ouest de Karachi, le 13 novembre 2016. La cité portuaire doit devenir le point d’ancrage sur la mer du Corridor économique Chine-Pakistan (CPEC).
    AAMIR QURESHI / AFP

    L’attaque, samedi 11 mai, contre le seul hôtel de luxe de la petite ville portuaire de Gwadar, aux confins de la province du Baloutchistan, symbole de la présence chinoise au Pakistan, a fait cinq morts, dont quatre employés de l’établissement et un soldat. Les forces de sécurité sont parvenues à reprendre le contrôle des lieux, dimanche, après avoir tué les trois assaillants qui s’y étaient repliés. L’opération a été revendiquée par l’Armée de libération du Baloutchistan (ALB) qui visait « les Chinois et autres investisseurs étrangers ».

    Le commando armé, habillé en militaires, s’était introduit à l’intérieur de l’hôtel, construit sur une colline faisant face à la mer. Souvent peu occupé, voire quasi désert, le Pearl Continental accueille généralement des officiels pakistanais de passage ou des étrangers, surtout des cadres chinois, travaillant à la construction d’un port en eau profonde qui doit être l’un des maillons des « nouvelles routes de la soie » promues par Pékin. Le premier ministre pakistanais, Imran Khan, a condamné l’attaque, considérant qu’elle voulait « saboter [les] projets économiques et [la] prospérité » du pays.

    Le symbole est fort. Gwadar doit devenir le point d’ancrage sur la mer du Corridor économique Chine-Pakistan (CPEC), dans lequel Pékin a prévu d’investir 55 milliards d’euros pour relier la province occidentale chinoise du Xinjiang et la mer d’Arabie. En 2018, le responsable du développement portuaire de Gwadar, Dostain Jamaldini, indiquait au Monde « qu’en 2014, la ville n’était encore qu’un village de pêcheurs mais en 2020-23, nous disposerons de 2,6 kilomètres de quais capables de recevoir cinq cargos, et dans vingt ans, ce sera l’un des principaux ports du monde ».

    Pour l’heure, en dépit de l’inauguration, au printemps 2018, par le premier ministre pakistanais d’alors, de plusieurs bâtiments construits par les Chinois dans la zone franche qui longe le port, l’activité demeure très faible.

    #OBOR #One_Belt_One_Road

  • Jewish cartoonist Eli Valley’s savage comics spark angry anti-Semitism debate | The Times of Israel
    https://www.timesofisrael.com/jewish-cartoonist-eli-valleys-work-sparks-angry-debate-about-anti-sem

    What sparked the latest Twitter conflagration is an op-ed in The Stanford Daily, the school’s student newspaper, comparing Valley’s comics to Der Sturmer, the Nazi paper.

    Valley is scheduled to speak on campus Friday, co-sponsored by two pro-Palestinian groups, Jewish Voice for Peace and Students for Justice in Palestine, and some of his comics were posted to advertise the event. One featured Shapiro, an Orthodox Jew, justifying the White House’s draconian immigration policies by inverting the messages of the Passover seder.

  • BBC - Future - The tricks of airport design

    How they keep travelers calm, quiet and... ready to shop !

    http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20190430-psychological-tricks-of-airport-design

    From a terminal’s colours to the security queue, here’s how airports are designed to keep travellers calm, quiet – and ready to shop.

    By Addison Nugent

    1 May 2019

    In 1995, French anthropologist Marc Auge categorised the airport as a “non-place”. Found the world over, non-places are devoid of identity – uniform structures (think Starbucks or McDonalds) that remain the same no matter where they are. By his definition airports are architectural machines, designed with the express purpose of moving people efficiently from one place to another.

    #dfs #aéroport #manipulation #consommation

  • How Many Countries Are There in the World in 2019 ?

    https://worldview.stratfor.com/article/how-many-countries-are-there-world-2019

    C’est légitime de s’intéresser à cette question, il y a matière à débattre (qu’est-ce qu’un pays indépendant, un territoire souverain, autonome, etc...) mais c’est très rigolo que Stratfor confonde le drapeau des Nations unies avec le drapeau américain. Bonjour l’acte manqué.

    One of the most basic questions for map-lovers is, “How many countries are there in the world?” But anyone who just gives you a number isn’t telling the whole truth. It actually depends a lot on how you define a “country.”

    #géographie #pays #pays_indépendant #souveraineté
    Here are six of the most common answers, each correct in its own way:
    195 Sovereign States According to the U.N.

    “Country” and “nation” are casual words for what political scientists call a “sovereign state,” meaning a place with its own borders and completely independent government. The question of which places count as sovereign states can be controversial, but for starters we normally count all the member and observer countries of the United Nations (U.N.):

    U.N. members: 193
    U.N. observer states: 2
    Total: 195

  • When a Town Takes Uber Instead of Public Transit - CityLab
    https://www.citylab.com/transportation/2019/04/innisfil-transit-ride-hailing-bus-public-transportation-uber/588154
    https://cdn.citylab.com/media/img/citylab/2019/04/RTS28UAK/facebook.jpg?1556565008

    Ihr Gemeinde hat keine öffentliches Busnetz, sie brauchen aber eins? Kein Problem, Uber macht das. Sofort, unkompliziert, flexibel, alle sind froh. Dann kommt der Erfolg. Und dann wird es teuer. So geschehen in einer Gemeinde in Kanada.

    Will das jemand in Deutschland?

    Das Rechenexempel zeigt, dass es egal ist, wie der private vermittler oder Beförderer heißt. Öffenliche System werden mit zunehmendem Erfolg immer billiger, private immer teurer. Ergo sind private Anbieter gut für Zwischenlösungen bis zum Aufbau eines funktionsfähigen öffentlichen Nahverkehrssystems. Wer sie beauftragt, muss den Zeitpunkt des Wechsels zur öffentlichen Lösung von Anfang an planen, sonst schlägt die Kostenfalle zu.

    Noch dümmer ist es, wenn öffentliche Angebote privatisiert werden. Dann wird es auch bei eingeschänktem Service sofort teuer.

    LAURA BLISS APR 29, 2019 - Innisfil, Ontario, decided to partially subsidize ride-hailing trips rather than pay for a public bus system. It worked so well that now they have to raise fares and cap rides.

    In 2017, the growing Toronto exurb of Innisfil, Ontario, became one of the first towns in the world to subsidize Uber rides in lieu of a traditional bus. Riders could pay a flat fare of just $3-$5 to travel to community hubs in the backseat of a car, or get $5 off regular fares to other destinations in and around town.

    People loved it. By the end of the Uber program’s first full year of service, they were taking 8,000 trips a month. Riders like 20-year-old Holley Hudson, who works for daycare programs at YMCAs around the area, relied on it heavily, since she doesn’t drive. To get to the college course practicums she was taking when the service launched, “I used Ubers on a Wednesday, Thursday, Friday basis,” she said.

    Now “Innisfil Transit” is changing its structure. As of April 1, flat fares for the city-brokered Ubers rose by $1. Trip discounts dropped to $4, and a 30-ride monthly cap was implemented. Town leaders say this will allow Innisfil to continue to cover costs.

    But Hudson and others see the changes as harmful, and a strange way of declaring success. As cities around the world turn to Uber, Lyft, and other apps as a quick fix for mobility service gaps, what’s now happening in Innisfil may be a good example of the risks.

    Innisfil’s journey with Uber began in 2015. Thickening traffic and an expanding population of seniors, students, and carless adults all signaled the need for some sort of shared mobility option in town. Just 45 minutes north of Toronto, the once-agricultural hamlet has recently ballooned in population, growing 17 percent from 2006 to 2016 to 37,000 residents.

    But as local leaders studied options for a fixed-route bus service, the cost/benefit analysis didn’t seem to add up. One bus to serve a projected 17,000 annual riders would cost $270,000 in Canadian dollars for the first year of service, or about $16 per passenger. And designing the system would be a drawn-out process.

    So instead, Innisfil did as so many people do when they’re in a hurry and facing a cumbersome bus ride: It hailed an Uber instead.

    “Rather than place a bus on the road to serve just a few residents, we’re moving ahead with a better service that can transport people from all across our town to wherever they need to go,” Gord Wauchope, then the mayor, said at the time.

    That logic is informing ride-hailing partnerships in dozens of communities across North America, all testing the notion that companies like Uber and Lyft can supplement or substitute for traditional service in some fashion. In certain cases, ride-hailing is replacing bus routes wholesale. In others, it’s responding to 911 calls, paratransit needs, and commuters traveling the last leg of a transit trip. Innisfil’s program was unique, in that the city branded the Uber partnership not as a complement to public transit, but as transit itself in a town without existing bus lines.

    Adoption of Innisfil Transit was fast and steady: The program racked up 86,000 rides in 2018. Nearly 70 percent of respondents to a city survey said that they were satisfied or more than satisfied with the new service—figures that would be the envy of any traditional public transit agency.

    But that popularity meant costs grew for the town. So now residents will have to cover more of their own trips. “It’s the growing ridership and popularity of the service,” town planner Paul Pentikainen said. “It’s been a great success, but there are also challenges with working with a budget.”

    “I would never get on a bus in Toronto and hear the driver say, ‘Sorry, but you’ve hit your cap.’”
    Normally, though, raising transit fares when ridership is growing is backwards logic. While passenger fares almost never cover the full cost of service, more passengers riding fixed-route buses and trains should shrink the per-capita public subsidy, at least until additional routes are added. On a well-designed mass transit system, the more people using it, the “cheaper” it gets.

    But the opposite is happening in Innisfil. Only so many passengers can fit in the backseat of an Uber, and the ride-hailing company, not the town, is pocketing most of the revenue. With per-capita costs essentially fixed, the town is forced to hike rates and cap trips as adoption grows. But this can create a perverse incentive: Fare bumps and ridership drops tend to go hand-in-hand on traditional systems.

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    The trip cap in particular bothers Hudson, who continues to rely on the Uber service as her primary mode of transportation. She expects that she’ll burn through her allotted 30 trips in a couple of weeks. The city has an application for residents to qualify for an extra 20 trips per month, but Hudson doesn’t plan to file. She’s opposed to the idea on principle.

    “I would never get on a bus in Toronto and hear the driver say, ‘Sorry, but you’ve hit your cap,’” Hudson said. “Uber was supposed to be our bus.”

    Hudson emailed town officials to complain about the new trip limit. In a reply, a city councillor named Donna Orsatti wrote that the cap had been implemented because “the system was being abused by those in the youth bracket who were using Uber at $3 to go to Starbucks (as an example), purchase a drink, then go back to school or meet their friends.”

    That sounded oddly judgmental to Hudson’s ears. And it’s not how public transit is supposed to work: “We shouldn’t be criticized for where we’re going,” she said.

    In an email to CityLab, Orsatti explained her intentions. The cap was never meant to restrict residents, but rather “to ensure it is available to all residents to allow them transportation to essential service areas,” she wrote. And Pentikainen acknowledged that, while the rate structure might work differently from traditional transit, Uber still makes more sense for Innisfil. The city’s subsidy for the program grew from $150,000 in 2017 to about $640,000 in 2018, and for 2019, it has allocated another $900,000. On a per trip basis, Pentikainen said, it’s still a lot cheaper than the projected bus costs, and more equitable.

    “It’s a service that the whole town has access to, versus providing a service that only those who can walk to bus stops can,” he said.

    Pentikainen says that—despite Orsatti’s email—no city report called out Starbucks-toting teens for “abusing” the system. But he did note that the cap was partly designed to discourage short-distance trips that can be accomplished on foot or bike for most people.

    According to an Uber spokesperson, the ride-hailing company also advised the city to implement the cap as a way to control costs.

    Uber has touted the success of the Innisfil program as it invites other cities to adopt its model. Part of the attraction is that ridership is sinking on public transit systems across North America, as on-demand transportation apps has boomed. City decision-makers sometimes opt for Lyft and Uber as a way to lure travelers back, or to cut costs on low-performing routes. In other cases, the rise of ride-hailing is used as a bad-faith justification for further slashing bus service.

    Success has been mixed for transit agency/ride-hailing marriages. Many programs have seen weak ridership, and cities can find themselves hamstrung in their ability to make adjustments, since ride-hailing companies are famously guarded about sharing trip data. Some, including Pinellas County, Florida, which subsidizes certain Uber trips, have heard complaints that municipal discounts don’t go very far as the on-demand transportation giant has raised its own fares.

    Now that both Uber and Lyft have filed initial public offerings, industry analysts predict that the costs of these services—which have been heavily subsidized by their billions in venture capital backing—will creep steadily upwards as public investors expect returns. And city governments and commuters who come to rely on ride-hailing as a social service won’t have much control.

    In Innisfil, Uber fares have held steady, according to Pentikainen. And the company has shared certain data upon request. As the city grows and ride-hailing services evolve, it will continue to evaluate the best way to mobilize its residents, Pentikainen said. Eventually, Innisfil might be interested in adopting Uber’s latest transit-like offering, which is called Uber Bus. Similar to the microtransit startup Via and its failed predecessors Chariot and Bridj, riders are scooped up in larger vans at designated locations on a schedule that is determined based on demand.

    And if Uber ever raised fares to the point where riders could no longer rationalize the costs, the city would go back to the drawing board. In some parts of town, Pentikainen said, they might even consider a regular fixed-route bus. “There are a range of ways to consider efficiencies from the town’s perspective,” he said. “All along, this was a starting point. We have to react along the way.”

    Still, the idea of further changes made in reaction to the app’s contingencies worries Hudson. That doesn’t sound like very reliable service for her, nor for the older people and students she sees riding in Ubers en route to school and doctor’s appointments. If Innisfil makes further tweaks, Hudson says she might consider getting her license in order to avoid the stress. But she fears more for what could happen to those who can’t.

    “Uber was supposed to be our public transit,” she said. “Now we have to think about whether we can take an Uber or not.”

    #Kanada #ÖPNV #Bus #Taxi #Uber #disruption #Rekommunalisierung

  • Boxed in: $1 billion of Iranian crude sits at China’s Dalian port - Reuters
    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-iran-oil-sanctions-idUSKCN1S60HS


    FILE PHOTO: Oil tankers pass through the Strait of Hormuz, December 21, 2018.
    REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed/File Photo

    Some 20 million barrels of Iranian oil sitting on China’s shores in the northeast port of Dalian for the past six months now appears stranded as the United States hardens its stance on importing crude from Tehran.

    Iran sent the oil to China, its biggest customer, ahead of the reintroduction of U.S. sanctions last November, as it looked for alternative storage for a backlog of crude at home.

    The oil is being held in so-called bonded storage tanks at the port, which means it has yet to clear Chinese customs. Despite a six-month waiver to the start of May that allowed China to continue some Iranian imports, shipping data shows little of this oil has been moved.

    Traders and refinery sources pointed to uncertainty over the terms of the waiver and said independent refiners had been unable to secure payment or insurance channels, while state refiners struggled to find vessels.

    The future of the crude, worth well over $1 billion at current prices, has become even more unclear after Washington last week increased its pressure on Iran, saying it would end all sanction exemptions at the start of May.

    No responsible Chinese company with any international exposure will have anything to do with Iran oil unless they are specifically told by the Chinese government to do so,” said Tilak Doshi of oil and gas consultancy Muse, Stancil & Co in Singapore.

    Iran previously stored oil in 2014 at Dalian during the last round of sanctions that was later sold to buyers in South Korea and India.

    China last week formally complained to the United States over the unilateral Iran sanctions, but U.S. officials have said Washington is not considering a further short-term waiver or a wind-down period.

    The 20 million barrels is equal to about a month’s worth of China’s imports from Iran over the past six months, or about two days of the country’s total imports.

    Iran says it will continue to export oil in defiance of U.S. sanctions.

    A senior official with the National Iranian Tanker Company (NITC), who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Reuters: “We will continue to sell our oil.”

    “_Iran is now desperate and will deal with anyone with steep discounts as long as they get paid somehow,” said Doshi.

  • Hotel
    https://www.nova-cinema.org/prog/2019/171-killing-2360/games-and-over/article/hotel-20955

    Benjamin Nuel, 2012, FR, HD, VO FR ,80’

    Terroristes désœuvrés et militaires anti-terroristes sans emploi ont suspendus les hostilités et tuent ensemble le temps dans un château gardé par une poule en jouant au ping-pong, en se baladant dans la forêt voisine ou en discutant du sens de la vie. Dans un univers aux allures becketiennes, le réalisateur détourne les personnages du FPS(*) Counter-Strike, pour développer une narration sans action et pleine de dialogues (le comble pour un jeu de guerre !) mêlant réflexions absurdes et humour existentiel. Une fois dépassée, ou acceptée, l’esthétique aride de cette animation minimaliste nous permet à notre tour de divaguer à l’intérieur de nous-mêmes, avant d’être rattrapé par l’apocalypse, représentée ici de manière singulièrement vidéoludique. •+ Courts (...)

  • Why content, not tech, is king in podcasting
    https://hackernoon.com/why-content-not-tech-is-king-in-podcasting-d0ce3d177b72?source=rss----3a

    A look at Spotify’s recent acquisitions, and the upcoming launch of Luminary2019 has been an unprecedented year for exits in the #podcast industry, driven by one company: Spotify. Spotify paid $340M to acquire content studio Gimlet and hosting platform Anchor in February, and last month purchased true crime content studio Parcast for an estimated $100M. A press release shortly after the first two acquisitions announced Spotify had “line-of-sight on total spend of $400-$500M in multiple acquisitions” for 2019, with planned further spend if the strategy paid off.This acquisition activity is especially notable in a space with few prior exits — iHeartMedia’s acquisition of Stuff Media (creators of How Stuff Works) for $55M was the largest previous exit. Podcasts also generate surprisingly little (...)

    #venture-capital #podcasting-content #hackernoon-top-story #podcasting-tech

  • A recap of emerging #trends in the #cryptoasset space (2019)
    https://hackernoon.com/a-recap-of-emerging-trends-in-the-cryptoasset-space-2019-a241dd509d59?so

    Having closed Q1 on a positive note and with the probability of having left the bear trend behind being very real, I wanted to take some time to evaluate the emergent trends within the cryptoasset space, that are likely to define 2019. While external factors, such as institutional onramps and custody are important, I will deliberately avoid focusing on those — as they are to some extent unknowns.PoS is becoming ubiquitousEveryone, and their grandmother are switching to PoS. According to Staked founder, Tim Ogilvie, there is “$25 billion of stake-able crypto that’s coming online in the next 15 months.” Capitalising on this trend, a bunch of venture backed staking as a service providers like Bison Trails, Staked, Chorus One and Figment Networks have sprung up left and right. As expected, more (...)

    #blockchain #cryptoasset-space #cryptocurrency

  • Building a Business on #slack — $80k/mo with a Slack-first App
    https://hackernoon.com/building-a-business-on-slack-80k-mo-with-a-slack-first-app-80eb79ab6cfb?

    Building a Business on Slack — $80k/mo with a Slack-first AppSlack is more than just a chat app; it’s an ecosystem to build a solid business on.While Slack prepares for the IPO, its App Ecosystem keeps evolving becoming a place to build a business on. Standuply, a Slack-first App, reached $80k in revenue in February 2019.I’m Alex Kistenev, CEO and co-founder of Standuply and in charge of marketing. This post is about my experience of growing a Slack App to $80k per month.The product competitionIf you search for ‘standup’ in the Slack App Directory, you’ll find Standuply at the 1st place with 30 other competing apps left behind. Here’s how we did that.Laser focusThere are Slack apps made by web development studios. They felt the pain, had resources and eventually built the initial product. But it (...)

    #success #tech #startup #entrepreneurship

  • AMA with Indie Hacker’s Courtland Allen at Noon PST On Thursday 4/18
    https://hackernoon.com/ama-with-indie-hackers-courtland-allen-at-noon-pst-on-thursday-4-18-8286

    Courtland Allen founded and runs #indiehackers.com at Stripe. Ask him anything @ Noon PST on Thursday 4/18.In Courtland’s own words:Greetings people of Hacker Noon!I’m Courtland, the creator of Indie Hackers. In 2016 I was bored of working my job as a developer and itching to do something on my own. But I couldn’t find much online about building a profitable business as a developer, aside from raising money from VCs and doing the whole startup thing.So I built Indie Hackers, a community of developers and founders swapping stories and advice to help each other make money from our apps and side projects. (It’s also a podcast!)Nine months later, it was acquired by Stripe, where I’ve continued to work on it happily for the past 2 years, interviewing over 400 founders and learning a lot in the (...)

    #courtland-allen-stripe #hacker-noon-ama #tech-ama #courtland-allen-ama

  • AMA with Jeff Atwood (@codinghorror) at Noon PST Today
    https://hackernoon.com/ama-with-jeff-atwood-codinghorror-at-noon-pst-today-2433e74a1897?source=

    Jeff Atwood is the co-founder of Stack Overflow and Discourse. Ask him anything @ Noon PST today! This is the first AMA in the Hacker Noon community.In Jeff’s words:I co-founded Stack Overflow in 2008 which ultimately became the Stack Exchange network of Q&A sites. After leaving SO in 2012, I started working on Discourse, an open source forum software, and that’s what I still work on today.I will be answering your questions live (at noon pst). Very excited that we are doing this here on Hacker Noon’s Discourse instance. I heard it’s pretty great.Feel free to add this to your calendar or ask a question below. Talk soon!Join the AMA.To nominate yourself or someone else for a Hacker Noon AMA, direct message me on Twitter or Hacker Noon.AMA with Jeff Atwood (@codinghorror) at Noon PST Today was (...)

    #hackernoon-ama #codinghorror #tech-ama #hackernoon-jeff-atwood #jeff-atwood

  • UK businesses using artificial intelligence to monitor staff activity
    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/apr/07/uk-businesses-using-artifical-intelligence-to-monitor-staff-activity

    Unions warn systems such as Isaak may increase pressure on workers and cause distrust Dozens of UK business owners are using artificial intelligence to scrutinise staff behaviour minute-to-minute by harvesting data on who emails whom and when, who accesses and edits files and who meets whom and when. The actions of 130,000 people in the UK and abroad are being monitored in real time by the Isaak system, which ranks staff members’ attributes. Designed by a London company, Status Today, it (...)

    #algorithme #biométrie #travail #géolocalisation #facial #travailleurs #surveillance #Isaak (...)

    ##TUC
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/2d9b1b0a86501cd5e0415a42429b12b0ec82edce/0_173_5184_3110/master/5184.jpg

  • Progressive Web Apps: Apple App Store, Google Play Store, It Was Nice Knowing You
    https://hackernoon.com/progressive-web-apps-apple-app-store-google-play-store-it-was-nice-knowi

    Is the end coming for the Apple App Store and Google Play Store? The title is obviously an exaggeration, but in all seriousness, the time has come for a new wave of #mobile technology to come to the fore. In 2018, Twitter announced that it has started offering its mobile PWA as its main site. PWA? What’s that?Progressive Web Apps (PWA) is the future of mobile apps and the web, pushed by heavyweights in the industry especially Google. With features such as adding to home screen, offline support, push notifications and more, a PWA offers a user experience approaching that of a native mobile app.Here’s how a PWA works. Imagine you have a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) app that is also PWA compliant. You just need to visit the app using a normal URL in your mobile browser. If you have (...)

    #mobile-app-development #progressive-web-app #web-development #open-source

  • Windows 10 Pro à 10,91€, Office 2016 Pro à 27,02€…
    https://www.tomshardware.fr/windows-10-pro-a-1091e-office-2016-pro-a-2702e

    Goodoffer24.com est une nouvelle boutique en ligne pour les jeux PC, les logiciels bureautiques et les cartes prépayées pour les consoles. Elle offre un accès rapide, sûr et à bas prix à une grande variété de contenus liés aux jeux. Parmi les services les plus attrayants sur Goodoffer24.com, on trouve Steam Software keys et Cloud Activation Games. Grâce à […]

  • Biometric #geopresence with Tarik Tali of Taliware
    https://hackernoon.com/biometric-geopresence-with-tarik-tali-of-taliware-5b5fe19343a8?source=rs

    Episode 33 of the Hacker Noon Podcast: An interview with Tarik Tali, the CEO and founder of Taliware.Listen to the interview on iTunes, or Google Podcast, or watch on YouTube.https://medium.com/media/4a4c1213ad4513fd92a7e11270a6f5c6/hrefIn this episode Trent Lapinski and Tarik Tali meetup at #startup Grind and talk about his new biometric geopresence app now available on the App Store, and the implications of this emerging technology. Disclosure: Trent is an advisor on this project.“We do #geolocation, geopresence verification, we tether the phone to the owner, and the location where they are.”“What we did, our system actually has a calendar, and it tracks every day separately and stores it in the cloud. All your checkins, if you go to Starbucks and purchase coffee, you checkin, and you use (...)

    #startup-grind #hacker-noon-podcast

  • Plastikophobia
    https://plastikophobia.com

    Plastikophobia is an immersive art installation made from 18,000 plastic cups collected from local food centers across Singapore to raise awareness for single-use plastic pollution. Artists Von Wong and Joshua Goh teamed up with Social impact strategist Laura Francois and almost a hundred volunteers over the course of ten days to bring this project to life. Source: Relevé sur le Net...