• Opinion | Fifteen Years Ago, America Destroyed My Country - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/19/opinion/iraq-war-anniversary-.html

    Par Sinan Antoon

    I left Iraq a few months after the 1991 Gulf War and went to graduate school in the United States, where I’ve been ever since. In 2002, when the cheerleading for the Iraq war started, I was vehemently against the proposed invasion. The United States had consistently supported dictators in the Arab world and was not in the business of exporting democracy, irrespective of the Bush administration’s slogans. I recalled sitting in my family’s living room with my aunt when I was a teenager, watching Iraqi television and seeing Donald Rumsfeld visiting Baghdad as an emissary from Ronald Reagan and shaking hands with Saddam. That memory made Mr. Rumsfeld’s words in 2002 about freedom and democracy for Iraqis seem hollow. Moreover, having lived through two previous wars (the Iran-Iraq war of 1980 to 1988 and the Gulf War of 1991), I knew that the actual objectives of war were always camouflaged by well-designed lies that exploit collective fear and perpetuate national myths.

    #Irak #crimes #Etats-Unis

  • Facebook’s Surveillance Machine - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/19/opinion/facebook-cambridge-analytica.html

    par Zeynep Tufekci

    Mr. Grewal is right: This wasn’t a breach in the technical sense. It is something even more troubling: an all-too-natural consequence of Facebook’s business model, which involves having people go to the site for social interaction, only to be quietly subjected to an enormous level of surveillance. The results of that surveillance are used to fuel a sophisticated and opaque system for narrowly targeting advertisements and other wares to Facebook’s users.

    Facebook makes money, in other words, by profiling us and then selling our attention to advertisers, political actors and others. These are Facebook’s true customers, whom it works hard to please.

    Facebook doesn’t just record every click and “like” on the site. It also collects browsing histories. It also purchases “external” data like financial information about users (though European nations have some regulations that block some of this). Facebook recently announced its intent to merge “offline” data — things you do in the physical world, such as making purchases in a brick-and-mortar store — with its vast online databases.

    Facebook even creates “shadow profiles” of nonusers. That is, even if you are not on Facebook, the company may well have compiled a profile of you, inferred from data provided by your friends or from other data. This is an involuntary dossier from which you cannot opt out in the United States.

    Qu’est-ce qu’un consentement éclairé dans la situation actuelle ?

    This wasn’t informed consent. This was the exploitation of user data and user trust.

    Let’s assume, for the sake of argument, that you had explicitly consented to turn over your Facebook data to another company. Do you keep up with the latest academic research on computational inference? Did you know that algorithms now do a pretty good job of inferring a person’s personality traits, sexual orientation, political views, mental health status, substance abuse history and more just from his or her Facebook “likes” — and that there are new applications of this data being discovered every day?

    Given this confusing and rapidly changing state of affairs about what the data may reveal and how it may be used, consent to ongoing and extensive data collection can be neither fully informed nor truly consensual — especially since it is practically irrevocable.

    A business model based on vast data surveillance and charging clients to opaquely target users based on this kind of extensive profiling will inevitably be misused. The real problem is that billions of dollars are being made at the expense of the health of our public sphere and our politics, and crucial decisions are being made unilaterally, and without recourse or accountability.

    #Surveillance #Facebook #Zeynep_Tufekci #Consentement_éclairé

  • États-Unis : un véhicule sans chauffeur Uber tue une piétonne dans l’Arizona figaro - Yohan Blavignat - 19 Mars 2017
    http://www.lefigaro.fr/international/2018/03/19/01003-20180319ARTFIG00238-etats-unis-un-vehicule-sans-chauffeur-uber-tue-un

    Une femme a été heurtée mortellement par une voiture autonome Uber dans la ville de Tempe, dans l’Arizona, alors qu’elle traversait en dehors d’un passage piéton. Il s’agit du premier accident mortel impliquant un piéton et une voiture sans chauffeur.
    La voiture autonome a fait sa première victime piétonne. D’après le New York Times , https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/19/technology/uber-driverless-fatality.html?action=Click&contentCollection=BreakingNews&c qui cite une source policière, un véhicule Uber en mode autonome, avec un opérateur humain derrière le volant, a percuté une femme qui traversait la rue en dehors d’un passage piéton dans la ville de Tempe, en Arizona. La police n’a pas précisé si l’accident avait eu lieu dimanche soir ou lundi matin, et la victime n’a pas été identifiée publiquement.

    Une porte-parole d’Uber a indiqué ce lundi que la compagnie « coopérait pleinement » avec les autorités locales. Uber a, par ailleurs, déclaré avoir suspendu les essais de ses voitures autonomes à Tempe, Pittsburgh, San Francisco et Toronto. Dara Khosrowshahi, PDG d’Uber, a tweeté : « Des nouvelles incroyablement tristes de l’Arizona. Nous pensons à la famille de la victime et nous travaillons avec les forces de l’ordre locales pour comprendre ce qui s’est passé ».

    Uber a testé ses voitures autonomes dans de nombreux États et suspendu temporairement ses véhicules en Arizona l’année dernière après un accident impliquant un de ses véhicules, un Volvo SUV. Lorsque la société a commencé à tester ses voitures autonomes en Californie en 2016, des véhicules ont été pris en flagrant délit de non-respect des feux rouges, ce qui a provoqué un conflit entre les organismes de réglementation et la société basée à San Francisco.

    #autopilote #voiture_autopilotée #voiture_autonome #transport #uber #voitures_autonomes #voiture #mobilité #automobile #robotisation #pieton #innovation #silicon_valley