Latest news, sport and comment from the Guardian

/news

  • Traffic wars: who will win the battle for city streets? | Road transport | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/news/2021/mar/25/traffic-wars-who-will-win-the-battle-for-city-streets

    Radical new plans to reduce traffic and limit our dependence on cars have sparked bitter conflict. As legal challenges escalate, will Britain’s great traffic experiment be shut down before we have time to see the benefits?

    by Niamh McIntyre

    On an overcast Saturday afternoon in December, a convoy of 30 cars, led by a red Chevrolet pickup truck, set off from the car park of an east-London Asda with hazard lights flashing. The motorists, who formed a “festive motorcade”, wore Santa hats as they made their way slowly through the borough of Hackney before coming to a halt outside the town hall a couple of hours later.

    They had gathered to register their outrage at being the victims, as they saw it, of a grand experiment that has been taking place on England’s roads since the start of the pandemic. As the national lockdown eased last summer, swathes of Hackney, stretching from Hoxton’s dense council estates at the borough’s western border with Islington to the edge of the River Lea marshland near Stratford in the east, had been closed to through traffic.

    Locals found their usual routes were shut off with little warning. Danielle Ventura Presas, one of the protesters, told me that she now struggled to get her disabled cousin to day care while also dropping off her two children at school on time. As we rolled through Clapton, another campaigner got out of her car and slowed the convoy to a walking pace, leading chants of “reopen our side roads!” on a megaphone.

    The road closures formed part of a wider scheme to tackle London’s growing congestion problems. Between 2009 and 2019, miles driven on its residential streets increased by 70%, in part due to the rise of Uber, online delivery services and GPS technology. Air pollution, meanwhile, plays a role in the premature deaths of nearly 10,000 Londoners each year. When the pandemic arrived, this trend was briefly interrupted: the roads fell quiet, and the novelty of car-free streets encouraged more people to go out on their bikes. In May 2020, the government tried to capitalise on the bike boom by announcing the biggest ever investment in “active travel” – walking, cycling or scooting. The short-term aim of the fund was to make it easier for people to get around without using public transport. The broader vision – reducing reliance on the private car – was more radical.

    In London, the Streetspace plan unveiled by mayor Sadiq Khan and Transport for London (TfL), demanded “an urgent and swift response” to the crisis. The strategy funnelled money from the government’s new active-travel fund to London’s boroughs for low-traffic neighbourhoods (LTNs) and other projects to encourage walking and cycling, such as temporary cycle lanes and timed road closures outside schools. By the end of last year, there were about 100 in London, where they have been most widely adopted, but they are now being rolled out in Manchester, Birmingham and other cities.

    LTNs block motor traffic from sidestreets with physical barriers such as planters or bollards, or with number plate recognition cameras at their boundaries which local authorities use to issue fines to drivers entering the zone. Residents inside LTNs can still drive to their home, but they may have to take a longer way round. The theory is that by reducing the amount of road space for cars, people will find other ways to make short journeys. (In London, almost half of car journeys are less than 2 miles.) That means more walking and cycling, which ultimately means less pollution, less congestion, quieter, safer streets and healthier citizens.

    Critics of LTNs say closing sidestreets increases congestion elsewhere, but early monitoring of new LTNs in Hackney and Lambeth found that traffic on main roads hardly increased at all. Data from established LTNs in Walthamstow showed the opposite, although transport academic Rachel Aldred suggests that it is hard to draw conclusions about the specific impacts of these schemes as traffic in the area was rising more generally at the time.

    Enthusiasm for LTNs brought about a rare consensus between the Conservative government and the Labour mayor of London, as well as Greens and pro-cycling groups. But an opposition also sprang up, bringing together an equally unlikely alliance of anti-gentrification activists, professional drivers, Labour and Conservative backbenchers, local councils, motoring lobbyists and a raft of new grassroots campaigners who shared their outrage on neighbourhood Facebook groups. On social media, each side conjured up its own vision of life in low-traffic neighbourhoods: one a utopia of families cycling happily together on quiet streets, with children wobbling out in front; the other a nightmare of permanently congested roads, with emergency vehicles snared in the gridlock.

    The protesters in the Hackney motorcade stressed that they had only brought their cars in order to respect social distancing and allow disabled people to participate. But the exuberant procession of cars, with their horns honking and engines revving, seemed to suggest something bolder: motorists reasserting their right to take up space on urban streets.

    Several cars in the motorcade had cabbage leaves lodged under windscreen wipers or taped to their doors, a reference to one of the most bitter exchanges in the conflict. Over the summer, Hackney’s cabinet member for transport, the Liverpudlian Jon Burke, had become a hate figure for opponents of LTNs after he responded to tweets which called for him to “go home” by tweeting: “If it wasn’t for immigrants, ‘born n bred’ Londoners would still be eating cabbage with every meal.”

    For anti-LTN campaigners, who sometimes caricature cycling advocates as a privileged elite, this was incendiary provocation. “What he’s having a go at is the white working class,” said Niall Crowley, one of the organisers of the protest. “That’s really incensed people.” In September, Burke received a handwritten death threat, and at the start of this year, he announced he would resign as a Hackney councillor in order to stand in his home city’s mayoral race. A newsletter issued by the Hackney protesters proclaimed his departure their victory.

    After the UK’s first lockdown ended in July, the traffic soon returned and talk of the government’s promised “cycling revolution” faded, while some objectors continued to vandalise its remnants. In Hackney, the new street signs were spray painted, and someone cut the cables on an expensive new traffic enforcement camera. In Ealing, bollards were removed one night and the holes they left behind filled in with concrete. Meanwhile, opponents of the mayor’s walking and cycling plans have pursued numerous legal challenges to the new policies.

    Burke told me LTNs were just one part of a complete reimagining of the borough’s public spaces for a low-carbon future. “We’re introducing huge amounts of cycle storage, the largest electric vehicle charging programme in the country, and we’re massively improving the quality of our public realm with the largest tree planting programme in Europe. I get emails from people saying ‘you’re the most hated man in Hackney’,” he said. “And I want to have a dialogue with those people, but I’m not going to tell them there’s a solution to the problems we face that allows them to continue driving to the same extent they were previously.”

    The next few months will be decisive, as councils push for temporary schemes to become permanent, and objectors fight for the right to drive wherever they need to go. London’s great traffic experiment hangs in the balance.

    For many Conservative voters and MPs, the party’s apparent shift from championing the car to promoting bikes is cause for alarm. In May 2020, Boris Johnson, himself a committed cyclist, announced a new “golden age” for cycling, as part of the Conservatives’ broader “green industrial revolution” strategy. This stated aim to reduce transport emissions – which was somewhat undermined earlier this month when Johnson announced his intention to cut taxes on domestic flights – has created an internal schism in a party that has traditionally represented the motorist’s interests. “Motorists did not vote for the Green party in the general election. But that is what we’ve got,” Howard Cox, the founder of the pro-driving campaign FairFuelUK, told me by email.

    As polling shows, people tend to like green policies in theory but less so when they are the ones being inconvenienced by them. Last year, a YouGov study found that the average British person was “an environmentally concerned recycler, who takes their own bag to the supermarket but also likes their meat, and balks at the thought of paying more tax to fund policies for tackling climate change”.

    After Conservative-controlled Kensington and Chelsea council removed a major cycle lane just seven weeks into its trial period, the Daily Mail reported that the prime minister’s transport adviser, Andrew Gilligan, called the council to let it know Johnson had gone “ballistic” at its decision. Gilligan, who worked with Johnson at the Spectator and later served as cycling commissioner during Johnson’s second term as mayor of London, has been instrumental in pushing the Tories to invest record sums in walking and cycling, according to several interviewees working in the transport sector.

    During his stint at City Hall, Gilligan gained a reputation for his “hard-nosed” operating style. “When we agreed, it was great, it was going to move forward very fast, there would be no obstacles in his path,” said Simon Munk, an infrastructure campaigner at the London Cycling Campaign. “But when you disagree with him and you become one of those obstacles, it’s quite a full-on experience.” Gilligan has shown the same single-mindedness at No 10. In May, when the Department for Transport invited all councils to bid for a fund to create temporary walking and cycling schemes, one of the conditions of the first wave of funding was that schemes had to be in place within 12 weeks.

    “The problem we’ve ended up with is because boroughs have been encouraged by the government to introduce them at such speed,” said Caroline Pidgeon, a Liberal Democrat member of the London assembly and a longstanding member of its transport committee. “People feel it’s being done to them rather than feeling like they’ve been brought along.”

    A government spokesperson said: “We want to ensure people have more opportunities to choose cycling and walking for their day-to-day journeys, as part of our wider plans to boost active travel – benefitting both the nation’s health and the environment. That’s why we have committed a significant £175m to create safe spaces for cycling and walking as surveys and independent polls show strong public support for high-quality schemes.”

    Among the many dissenters to the introduction of LTNs across the country are 14 Tory MPs, who signed a letter in November to the transport secretary Grant Shapps, calling on the government to “stop the uncalled-for war on the motorist” and withdraw “the blockades and dedicated cycle lanes eating into our town and city roads”. The spectre of the “war on the motorist”, in which the longsuffering driver is constantly thwarted in his efforts to get around, while being made to pay more and more for the privilege of doing so, has been with us since at least the 60s, despite having little basis in fact.

    In 2011, the coalition government declared an end to the conflict, promising to quell “Whitehall’s addiction to micromanagement”. Unsurprisingly, that wasn’t the end of the story. Earlier this year, a Telegraph editorial called on Conservatives to once again take a stand against Sadiq’s Khan’s war on cars.

    The MPs’ letter was organised by the campaign group FairFuelUK, which works with mostly Conservative politicians in an all-party parliamentary group, arranging meetings with motoring campaigners and planning political actions. “Backbench Tories have told me they’re uncomfortable with the government’s focus on the privileged cycling few,” said Cox. “The prime minister and his Lycra-clad advisers are out of touch with economic reality and majority opinion.”

    Niall Crowley, the Hackney roads protester who will stand as a candidate in council byelections in Hoxton East and Shoreditch, agrees. Frustrations about low-traffic neighbourhoods, he told me, are really about the fact that people resent top-down decision-making and feel excluded from local democratic processes. “Everything I read, it’s ‘we’re doing this and you have to get used to it’. If you’re going to treat residents as a problem to be managed or nudged, then what kind of democracy is that?”

    In September, a group of black cab drivers and their supporters gathered outside City Hall in London to accuse mayor Sadiq Khan of “destroying London”. A campaigner gave a speech on the concourse outside the mayor’s office, grimly predicting that the black cab’s days were numbered if road closures were not reversed. “This is the endgame,” he told the crowd.

    During the summer, TfL had barred taxis and other private vehicles from Bishopsgate, an ancient road that takes its name from the defensive wall built by the Romans around the city. The road runs past Liverpool Street station and into the financial district; cars, cabs, buses and cyclists compete for space. Cab drivers were also angry about TfL’s decision to exclude them from some central London bus lanes, which they can ordinarily use to drive around the city more quickly. They also protested about about losing access to other main roads under restrictions that allow only buses, cyclists and emergency vehicles to pass through.

    Although taxi drivers have been the vanguard of the resistance to Khan’s active travel plans, Steve McNamara, the chair of the Licensed Taxi Drivers’ Association, said cabbies were not always opposed to new cycle lanes. “It’s much less stressful for them if they’re driving their cab and the cyclist is in a nice segregated lane next to them,” he said. “But what we don’t support are these ones that are banged in with very little planning, that look like they’ve been designed on the back of a fag packet.”

    In interviews, McNamara repeatedly returns to a theme that cyclists are a privileged minority making life more difficult for working-class drivers in the suburbs. “If you can afford to live centrally, and you’ve got a well-paid job in the city or central London, it’s great for you to be able to ride to work,” McNamara said. “But equally if you live in the suburbs, as most Londoners do, and you have to get the bus to work, or you’re driving a lorry, it’s not so good.”

    Some of London’s suburban boroughs, which are less well served by public transport and have higher rates of car ownership, have embraced new cycling and walking schemes, and received £30m from City Hall to become flagship “mini-Hollands”. But others remain resistant: in Barnet, councillor Roberto Weeden-Sanz said the Conservative group would take a stand against the “war on drivers” by refusing to implement LTNs. Barnet has a proud history of opposing traffic reforms: in 2003, the council’s environment committee chair Brian Coleman ordered the removal of 1,000 speed humps in the borough. A triumphant Telegraph column compared Coleman to Winston Churchill and Field Marshal Montgomery.

    There is no evidence that LTNs disproportionately benefit the better-off. A new study has shown that, contrary to one of the most common objections, road closures have not shifted traffic from wealthier areas into more deprived ones. Polling in London has repeatedly shown that more people support LTNs than oppose them. Burke, the former Hackney councillor whose comment about cabbage enraged his opponents, believes that car reduction advocates shouldn’t be afraid of arguments over class. “What I’m not willing to do, as someone who comes from a working-class background, is cede an inch of ground to people who have tried to make this a class issue,” he told me. “Seventy percent of the households in Hackney don’t own cars, so why should cars own 100% of the roads? LTNs are an exercise in redistribution.”

    But statistics have not dispelled a popular narrative that car reduction measures are unwanted policies imposed by the “metropolitan elite” on the poor. McNamara is eager to frame car reduction measures as a class war. “And let’s be honest – the working classes are losing badly,” he said.

    McNamara is playing on familiar stereotypes. In the 2010s, the folk figure of the hipster had three essential characteristics: a beard, a love of artisan coffee and a fixed-gear bike. The urban cyclist does not cause gentrification, but he becomes a powerful symbol of it. He is able to adapt and thrive in a rapidly changing urban environment in a way that established working-class communities are not. He is also visible in a way that the structural causes of the housing crisis are not. As such he – and his bike – have become a focus for anger about inequality and displacement.

    In his study of cycling culture in the San Francisco Bay Area, the geographer John Stehlin did not find a causal link between bike lanes and gentrification. But he argued that initiatives to make streets more livable, while often motivated by progressive ideals, also became useful marketing tools for developers of high-end housing.

    However, Mohammad Rakib, a community activist in the borough of Tower Hamlets, which borders Hackney to the south and has the highest poverty rates in London, believes LTNs play a more active role in attracting middle-class newcomers to deprived areas and squeezing out the long-term working-class residents. “These policies are more about social cleansing than they are about reducing pollution,” Rakib told me.

    Rakib sometimes makes memes depicting cyclists as “urban colonialists”, combining cycling helmets with the imagery of empire. His point that the users of bike lanes do not reflect the diversity of areas like Tower Hamlets, however, is undeniably true. In 2019, according to TfL research, 85% of cyclists on TfL’s cycle routes were white.

    “These areas and communities have waited generations for this level of investment,” he said. “Now that money has been made available, it is not being spent as the community have been asking for it to be spent. LTNs suit a certain class of people who are by no stretch the majority within these areas.”

    Cycling hasn’t always been seen as the preserve of the metropolitan elite. In the mid-20th century, the bicycle was a primary mode of transport for the working class, while the motorcar remained unaffordable to most. In his celebratory 1949 work Leisure (Homage to Jacques-Louis David), the French artist Fernand Léger depicted a gang of workers taking a trip out of the city on their bikes – a vision of the labour-saving potential of the humble bicycle. That same year, 37% of all journeys in Britain were cycled, according to Carlton Reid’s book Bike Boom. From that peak, the figure has fallen to about 2% today.

    The mid-20th century is a “what if?” moment, where one possible future was blotted out by the ascendancy of the car. In the 1930s, the government planned to vastly expand a national network of cycle routes as well as create a new system of motorways. Both were delayed by the war, and in the end government prioritised the motorways. From the 50s onwards, car ownership became an aspiration of the middle classes and a symbol of a new age of affluence. By the 60s, Britain had become a “car-owning democracy”, in the words of Simon Digby, the MP for Dorset west at the time.

    As cars became more common, so did congestion and pollution. In response, in the 60s transport minister Ernest Marples introduced a raft of new driving restrictions, including yellow lines and parking wardens. Marples said in 1964 that an enraged motorist had once thrown one of his new parking meters through his drawing room window. “I am accused of declaring war on the motorist,” he said in a 1963 speech to the Passenger Transport Association. “That is a complete travesty of the truth.”

    During the 70s, concerns about the environmental impacts of the car grew, particularly around emissions from leaded petrol. By the time Margaret Thatcher announced that her government would oversee “the largest road building programme since the Romans” in 1989, a growing ecological movement responded with a series of militant actions, among them a protest camp on the site of the planned M3 expansion at Twyford Down in Hampshire. Almost a year later, the camp was evicted and the motorway was built.

    Out of this anti-roads scene came a group called Reclaim the Streets, which crashed into public consciousness in May 1995 with a daring piece of street theatre. At a busy traffic intersection in Camden in north London, two cars driven by activists collided. Their drivers got out and began to argue. The argument escalated until both drivers took out sledgehammers and smashed up the cars, creating a DIY barricade and allowing other members of the group to set up a sound system and a children’s play area, turning the busy high street into a carnival. The group, which was immersed in 90s rave culture and the movement against the 1994 Criminal Justice Act, went on to hold dozens of similar events all over the UK.

    “A year after we were being branded as terrorists, Islington council organised a very similar party to the one we’d hosted,” said one former activist Roger Geffen. “This idea that you should close city streets to motor vehicles and open them up to people – it was already starting to go mainstream.” When I asked Chris Knight, a former Reclaim the Streets activist, about the group’s philosophy, he said: “It was quite simple: kill the car! A car just captures so much: private ownership, privatised space, isolation, egocentrism, deafness to the world around you. ‘Kill the car’ was just beautiful.”

    This group of anarchists and radicals wanted to take back space from cars and promote walking, cycling and public transport for everyday use – the same ideas that would resurface 25 years later among the policies of a Conservative government. Geffen, now director of policy at advocacy group Cycling UK, exemplifies the way car reduction policies have gone from a fringe belief to the mainstream: his march through the institutions took him from illicit raves and squatting to Buckingham Palace, where he received an MBE for services to cycling in 2015. “It’s been an interesting trajectory,” he said.

    On a September evening between lockdowns, I watched a cricket match happening in the middle of Rye Lane, a narrow high street in Peckham, south-east London, which used to be choked with traffic until it was closed to cars by Southwark council in July. A makeshift wicket was set up outside a local institution, Khan’s Bargains, and people spilling out of bars jostled for a chance to bowl. It was exactly the sort of creative use of public space that Reclaim the Streets wanted to inspire, and a rare moment of genuine collective joy.

    Will we look back on the past year as another “what if” moment, a bold but ultimately unsuccessful attempt to reduce the car’s domination of our roads and cities? By the winter of 2020, more than 30 councils across the country had withdrawn or scaled back new traffic-reduction schemes in the face of opposition. Some of these projects were only ever intended to be temporary, but TfL and the boroughs had stated their ambition for new bike lanes and LTNs to become permanent if the data showed they were working effectively.

    In December, a few days after Kensington and Chelsea council announced it would scrap a new cycle route along Kensington High Street, a group of Extinction Rebellion activists and cycling campaigners gathered in an attempt to stop the removal of the lane. Wearing hi-vis jackets and carrying placards, a small group of protesters climbed on to construction vans and prevented the workers from pulling out the bollards separating cyclists from the traffic on the busy east-west road. Donnachadh McCarthy, the founder of the Stop Killing Cyclists campaign, told me the group had held protests here before to commemorate cyclists killed in the surrounding area – 15 people have been seriously injured while walking or biking along the high street itself in the past three years – but this was the first time his group had used such militant tactics.

    The following night, after a second protest was dispersed by the police, the council succeeded in removing the bollards. A few weeks later, the route was still busy with cyclists, who now mingled with buses, taxis and high-performance cars. The scars where the bollards used to be were still visible on the asphalt.

    The recent reforms suffered another blow in January, when Mrs Justice Beverley Lang ruled that TfL had acted unlawfully in using emergency measures to introduce changes to road layouts. The judge ruled that the process behind the decision to exclude taxis from Bishopsgate and the overarching Streetspace plan were “seriously flawed” and did not recognise the “special status” of taxi drivers.

    The ruling also found TfL had not sufficiently researched or mitigated the potential adverse impacts of Streetspace projects on taxi passengers with disabilities. Transport for All, a charity advocating for accessible transport, found many disabled people felt “their concerns [about LTNs] have been ignored, creating feelings of anger and frustration”. However, the organisation has pointed out that traffic reduction schemes do not necessarily need to be scrapped, but rather modified with features such as tactile paving and exemptions for disabled drivers.

    TfL points out the ruling did not make any direct findings on the lawfulness of low-traffic neighbourhoods, but with the legality of the Streetspace plan itself in doubt, some councils are worried the judgment could have a wider impact. While most schemes remain in place pending TfL’s appeal, Sutton and Croydon councils have withdrawn LTNs. Sutton council said in a statement: “Some schemes were working well, but we have no choice given the legal judgment.” In June 2021, a separate set of judicial reviews will challenge the future of active travel schemes in the boroughs of Lambeth, Hounslow and Hackney.

    ’I don’t want to be seen as a zealot’: what MPs really think about the climate crisis
    Read more
    With TfL on the back foot in Kensington, cycling advocates have called on the mayor to use his statutory powers to take back control of the high street from the council. At the cyclists’ protest in Kensington in December, the transport historian Christian Wolmar said that the borough’s bike lanes had long been the site of a broader power struggle over the future of the city. As police officers hovered and tried to disperse the protesters, Wolmar recalled the council scrapping cycle lanes in Kensington and Chelsea more than 30 years ago, amid a wider conservative backlash against the leftist policies of the Greater London council, which included an early attempt at a London-wide cycle network. I asked how he felt about having the same arguments 30 years on. “Everything we know about urban planning shows that cities that give themselves to car dominance become less pleasant places to live. Who would want to live in Los Angeles if you could live in Copenhagen, for Christ’s sake?”

    Across Europe, increasingly radical car-free policies have been met with vocal opposition. In Paris, a major pedestrianisation scheme faced a protracted court battle (which the scheme ultimately won), while Berlin’s pop-up bike lanes launched during the pandemic faced a legal challenge from the far-right Alternative für Deutschland party.

    But when I asked Wolmar if he thought the backlash in London could kill the city’s car reduction plans, he was confident it would not. “They’ll win a few battles,” he said, “but they’ll lose the war.”

    This article was amended on 25 March 2021. Mention of a 1939 government cycling plan was corrected; some national cycle routes were in place before the war. According to Kensington and Chelsea council, 15 pedestrians and cyclists were seriously injured, not killed, in a three-year period on Kensington High Street.

    #Verkehr #Großbritannien

  • Marx-Engels-Stiftung - Industrie 4.0 - Die neue Herausforderung !
    http://www.marx-engels-stiftung.de/termine.html

    Sa, 18.06., 11-16 Uhr, Berlin-Charlottenburg, Marx-Engels-Zentrum, Spielhagenstr. 13
    Industrie 4.0 - Die neue Herausforderung!
    Seminar des MEZ Berlin in Kooperation mit der Marx-Engels-Stiftung
    es referieren:

    Depuis quelques années le ministère de l’économie du Bund (BMWI) fait l’apologie d’une expression inventée par ses propres soins. C’est sa méthode d’occuper une place à l’avant garde du développement technologique. Je parle du terme Industrie 4.0 qui prétend définir les paradigmes de la révolution technologique en cours.

    Le ministre investit des millions en subventions, pour l’organisation de rencontres et pour la publication de prospectus. On y dépense un nombre considérable d’heures de travail de des bureaucrates sur place afin de propager cette idée. Le ministre veut peut changer la face du monde, c’est à dire maintenir la place hégémoniale du capitalisme allemand au sein de l’Europe en étroite collaboration avec nos amis américains.

    Tout ce que j’ai pu observer du grand projet donne l’impression de formules vides qui se transforment en subventions gâchées pour des projets sous contrôle de PDGs incapables. On arrive néanmoins à renforcer le mythe de la compétivité et supérorité technologique de l’Allemagne. En réalité la classe des industriels allemands n’a plus grand choses à opposer aux géants de l’information et de l’espionnage étatsunien, le capital de d’un bon nombre de grandes sociétés allemandes étant tombé dans les mains des investisseurs chinois, arabes et indiens. C’est en Chine que Volkswagen fait la plus grande part de son chiffre d’affaires ce qui implique un transfert de savoir faire technologique vers l’asie qu’on observe également dans d’autres domaines industriels.

    Comme toujours on essaie de cacher les faits économiques derrière un discours public marqué par des idées nationalistes dont l’expression Industrie 4.0 . Ce samedi la fondation Marx-Engels-Stiftung invite trois théoriciens marxistes à mettre les point sur les i-s de l’expression à la mode.

    Werner Seppmann, Soziologe : Der Kapitalismus und die Digitalisierung des Sozialen
    http://www.glasnost.de/autoren/seppmann

    Werner Seppmann commence par une critique exemplaire de Wikipedia : On lui y attribue une collaboration avec l’auter Peter Hacks qui n’a jamais eu lieu mais se trouve désormais dans de nombreuses présentation de sa carrière.
    https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner_Seppmann

    Neue Technik – Neue Gesellschaft ? Versuch über den Internet-Kapitalismus (2001)
    http://www.glasnost.de/autoren/seppmann/computer.html

    Viele Beschäftigten in der „Internet-Ökonomie“ müssen sich mit einer Erfahrung auseinandersetzen, der sich in Kreisen der Kapitalgeber mittlerweile zur unerschütterlichen Überzeugung verdichtet hat: dass viele zukunftstechnologische Betätigungsfelder ihre Zukunft schon hinter sich haben. Diese Einschätzung gilt sicherlich nicht für die „Neue Ökonomie“ in ihrer Gesamtheit, jedoch breitet sich Skepsis aus: „Viele Start-ups stellen ernüchtert fest, dass ihr Spaßmodell nur in Boomzeiten funktioniert. Die Euphorie der Gründer ist verflogen, auch unter den Mitarbeitern schwindet der Elan: Sie haben darauf vertraut, dass ihre Firmenanteile ein Vermögen wert sind, wenn sie einmal an der Börse gehandelt werden. Diese Hoffnung hat sich als Illusion erwiesen.“ (Der Spiegel, Nr. 52/2000, S. 87) Die Konsequenzen, die von den Belegschaften in der „Neuen Ökonomie“ aus dieser Situation gezogen werden, sind sehr traditionell: Nachdem bei dem einstigen Spekulanten-Liebling EM.TV die Mitarbeiterzahl in der deutschen Zentrale von 170 auf 20 reduziert werden soll, besinnen sich die Beschäftigten auf gewerkschaftliche Schutzmechanismen und bereiten Betriebsratswahlen vor: „Einst waren bei EM.TV, dessen frühen Mitarbeiter dank Aktienoptionen zu Millionären werden konnten, ein Betriebsrat verpönt.“

    Pendant le séminaire Werner Seppmann insiste sur les phénomènes d’actualité :

    – Une partie de ses propres oeuvres reste introuvable sur Google alors qu’ils sont en ligne, parce que d’autres acteurs (de droite) occupent les premières pages affichés lors ce qu’on cherche les termes sur lesquelles il a publié des textes. Ceci revient à censurer ses oeuvres : Dans un catalogue de bibliothèque traditionnelle tous les oeuvres sur un sujet sont égales alors que la recherche Google sort du catalogie seulement les idées que Google préfère, il n’y a pas de norme de classification connue à tous. Seppmann ne fait pourtant pas de proposition comment y remédier.
    – Il constate l’incompétence des leaders économiques et politiques face au défi de la digitalisation. (Le PDG des éditions Axel Springer Döpfner a effectivement dit qu’il avait peur de Google)

    – Google a signé des contrats avec les grandes maisons d’édition qui leur garantissent la visibilité alors que les petits éditeurs et les auteurs individuels sont à la merci des "algorithmes".

    – Parallèlement avec le web s’est développée une industrie de manipulation de l’inconscient plus brutale et efficace que les publicitaires classiques.

    – Le processsus du "sharing" des médias réduit le nombre d’opinions et de produits médiatiques visibles, ce qu’on appelle "going viral" (klaus++) est un processus de création d’avalanche qui aspire l’attention. Dans les réseaux sociaux 20 pour cent de la communication serait produite par des robots à l’insu des utilisateurs qui communiqueraient avec les machines sans s’en rendre compte.

    – Lanalyse des méta-données permet le flicage des mouvements et individus et permet de prévoir le moment de l’éruption d’une révolte.

    – Le processus de "digitalisation" est prèsque complet, il y a des secteurs où il est accompli et d’autres qui permettent encore à prévoir des gains en efficacité par l’introduction de technologies numériques.

    Seppmann pense que les "chances de la digitalisation" (en francais on perlerait plutôt de numérisation) sont quasi nulles surtout quand on les compare aux pertes engendrées par l’invasion des ordinateurs.
    – Cet aspect de la transformation numérique se traduit par l’objectivation du savoir faire des ouvrier quand il est coulé dans le moule des algorithmes. Le contrôle par les ordinateurs remplace ainsi ce qui reste de l’autodétermination au travail.

    – Une dernière ligne de défense des employés est la loi du travail Betriebsverfassungsgesetz qui permet aux comités d’entreprise (Betriebsräte) d’intervenir par rapport à certains aspects de relations employeur/employés. Déjà faut-il un comité d’entreprise qui n’existe pas dans la plupart des entreprises "startup".

    Je ne partage pas la vision systématiquement négative de Werner Seppmann qui ne connaît de sortie de secours du processus inévitable de la concentration du capital qu’une crise profonde voire une guerre à la sortie de laquelle on remet tout à zéro. C’est au troisième intervenant du seminaire Peter Brödner d’expliquer les limites concrètes du pouvoir technocratique et permet ainsi une réflexion sur les nouvelles formes de défense des intérêts des employés.

    Ralf Krämer, Ver.di Gewerkschaftssekretär : Die Roboter kommen, die Arbeit geht ?
    https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralf_Kr%C3%A4mer_(Politiker)

    Krämer trat 1976 in die SPD ein. Von 1988 bis 1993 war er Landesvorsitzender der Jusos in Nordrhein-Westfalen, 1991 bis 1996 gehörte er dem Landesvorstand der nordrhein-westfälischen SPD an. 1999 verließ er die SPD. Seit 2002 ist er Sekretär beim ver.di-Bundesvorstand und dort Experte für Wirtschaftspolitik. Krämer gehört dem SprecherInnenkreis der Strömung Sozialistische Linke an. Am 29. Mai 2016 wurde er in den Parteivorstand der Linken gewählt.

    Über mich
    http://www.ralfkraemer.de/person

    Die Roboter kommen, die Arbeit geht ? « Zeitschrift LuXemburg
    http://www.zeitschrift-luxemburg.de/die-roboter-kommen-die-arbeit-geht

    Für Länder, die in der internationalen Arbeitsteilung darauf spezialisiert sind, die Automatisierungstechniken zu produzieren, könnten tatsächlich Beschäftigungsgewinne entstehen. Darauf setzen offenbar die deutsche Industrie und die Bundesregierung mit ihrer Hightech-und-Industrie-4.0-Strategie. Als Kehrseite drohen allerdings umso größere Beschäftigungsverluste in anderen Ländern, die Automatisierungstechnik nur anwenden, ohne sie selbst zu produzieren. Weniger entwickelte Länder würden so noch weiter abgehängt. Die außenwirtschaftlichen Überschüsse Deutschlands und die davon ausgehenden internationalen Ungleichgewichte und Verschuldungsverhältnisse würden damit fortgeschrieben oder noch gesteigert. Über kurz oder lang wird dies zu neuen Krisen führen.
    ...
    Zentrale Ziele müssen die soziale Absicherung und Regulierung aller Erwerbstätigkeit sein, insbesondere auch bisher prekärer und unregulierter Arbeit von Solo-Selbstständigen und der »Crowd in der Cloud«. Es muss verhindert werden, dass die Digitalisierung genutzt wird, um die Schutzrechte und Einkommensansprüche der Arbeitenden zu unterlaufen oder Sozialbeiträge oder Steuerzahlungen zu umgehen. Die Rechte und Mitbestimmungsmöglichkeiten der Arbeitenden und der Gewerkschaften müssen gestärkt werden. Und es geht um die Ausweitung und solidarische Finanzierung gesellschaftlich sinnvoller Beschäftigung in sozialstaatlich organisierten, für alle zugänglichen und ökologisch verträglichen Dienstleistungen und Infrastrukturen. Der ver.di-Bundeskongress 2015 hat in einem umfangreichen Beschluss »Gute Arbeit und gute Dienstleistungen in der digitalen Welt« konkretere Anforderungen formuliert.

    Ralf Krämer développe ses arguments à partir de l’analyse de la productivité et de l’emploi. Il met l’accent sur les facteurs qui atténuent les changements radicaux et découvre encore des champs d’action pour les syndicats traditionnels. Comme Werner Seppmann il n’a rien à proposer pour les employés et auto-entrepreneurs des secteurs qui sont touchés le plus par la précarité salariale, l’atomisation des employés et l’absence de comités d’entreprises. Il se situe du côté de ceux qui défendent les aquis sociaux mais n’envisagent pas d’action pour conquérir de nouveaux secteurs économiques.

    Peter Brödner, Maschinenbau-Ingenieur : Industrie 4.0 und Big Data - Kritik einer technikzentrierten PerspektivePeter Brödner, Maschinenbau-Ingenieur : Industrie 4.0 und Big Data - Kritik einer technikzentrierten Perspektive
    http://www.hda-online.net/attachments/article/48/Brödner%20Industrie40%20und%20BigData.pdf


    Peter Brödner utilise les document référencé plus haut comme fil d’Ariadne pendant ses explication du labyrinthe construit autour du progrès technologique et des structures industrielles.
    - Pour Peter Brödner l’histoire de l’industrialisation est l’histoire de l’introduction progressive des méthodes scientifiques dans la production industrielle. Ce qu’on appelle en allemand Digitalisierung (numérisation) commence déjà il y a 180 ans avec Charles Babbage et sa machine mais aussi son traité Economy of Machinery qui fait de lui un précurseur de Taylor. C’est Konrad Zuse qui construit une machine á calculer il y a 75 ans et réalise les idées de Babbage. L’histoire de la concurrence capitaliste connaît deux phases. D’abord ce sont rationalisation et réduction des coûts de la production qui constituent un avantage majeur pour une entreprise qui arrive à empocher des extra-profits á cause son avance technologique. Actuellement l’innovation est le facteur principal pour l’avance sur les concurrents. Il résulte de ce changement une grande insécurité pour les entreprises car ce qui est nouveau et innovant aujourd’hui peut être vieux et démodé demain. Cette insécurité contribue à l’imposition de l’autogestion des personnes et équipes au sein des entreprises.

    Les promesses de l’Industrie 4.0 sont des mensonges parce qu’elles sont fondés sur des théories invalidées depuis longtemps (planche 7 du document). D’après Brödner il est impossible de réaliser la promesse d’un système de production interconnecté qui englobe et automatise le processus de production du début á la fin.

    Pour y arriver on se sert forcément de nombreuses machines non triviales aux résultats imprévisibles. Le degré de complexité et l’imprévisibilité conséquente font du processus de production quelque chose d’aléatoire. Cette réflexion théorique se valide aisément par des exemples comme des catastrophes d’aviation, l’échec de la cybernétique dans les années 1950 et 1960 et les faillites d’entreprises industrielles après l’introduction du computer-integrated manufacturing (CIM) dans les années 1980.

    La raison de ces erreurs n’est pas seulement l’ignorance mais surtout une vision technocentriste du monde. On oublie les conditions culturelles et sociales de la réussite parce qu’on aime écouter le chant des sirènes technophiles.

    Ce phénomène se trouve au centre du problème appellé big data . En 2008 Le rédacteur en chef de Wired Chris Anderson proclame la fin de la théorie avec la phrase "All models are wrong, but some are useful." A l’ère des données disponibles par petabytes il suffirait de creuser avec des algorithmes pour obtenir une réponse à toute question.

    The End of Theory : The Data Deluge Makes the Scientific Method Obsolete | WIRED
    http://www.wired.com/2008/06/pb-theory/http://www.wired.com/2008/06/pb-theory

    Cette hypothèse n’est pas restée sans réponse :

    Big data and the end of theory ? | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2012/mar/09/big-data-theory

    The end of theory in science ?
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2711825

    Big Data and the Survival of the Scientific Method
    http://badhessian.org/2013/10/big-data-and-the-survival-of-the-scientific-method

    Big Data Won’t Kill the Theory Star | Dart-Throwing Chimp
    https://dartthrowingchimp.wordpress.com/2013/02/23/big-data-wont-kill-the-theory-star

    Peter Brödner propose une alternative aux approches de l’ intelligence artificielle (AI) et au big data. Il favorise le paradigme de IA, l’ intelligence (humaine) amplifiée (par l’ordinateur) pour rendre les choses stables et faisables. Avec sa déscription des limites d’AI et de big data il ouvre la perspective du déclin à venir des paradigmes en vogue et crée les fondations pour les stratégies de résistance contre les folies technophiles néo-libérales.

    Kurzbiografie
    http://www.wiwi.uni-siegen.de/wirtschaftsinformatik/mitarbeiter/broedner

    Prof. Dr.-Ing., Jahrgang 1942, Studium des Maschinenbaus in Karlsruhe und Berlin, ab 1968 Assistententätigkeit und Promotion (1974) am Institut für Produktionstechnische Automatisierung der TU Berlin. 1976 bis 1989 Management industrieller Entwicklungsprojekte auf den Gebieten NC-Programmierung, flexible Fertigungssysteme, Produktionsplanung und -steuerung und anthropozentrische Produktionssysteme bei den Projektträgern Humanisierung des Arbeitslebens (DLR Bonn) und Fertigungstechnik (Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe). 1989 bis 2005 Forschungsdirektor für Produktionssysteme am Institut Arbeit und Technik im Wissenschaftszentrum Nordrhein-Westfalen mit den Arbeitsgebieten Gestaltung computerunterstützter Arbeit und organisationaler Wandel. Seither im Ruhestand, zugleich Forschungsberater und Lehrbeauftragter für „IT in Organsationen“, Honorarprofessor an der Universität Siegen.

    Marx-Engels-Stiftung
    http://www.marx-engels-stiftung.de

    Die Ideen von Marx und Engels an Fragen, die aktuell in Wissenschaft, Politik und Gesellschaft gestellt werden, unter Marxistinnen und Marxisten und über diesen Kreis hinaus zu diskutieren, daran die Wirksamkeit der ’alten’ Ideen zu erproben und sie dialektisch weiter zu entwickeln - ein „Einfaches, das schwer zu machen ist“. Die Stiftung tut dies in der Forschung - derzeit vor allem im Projekt „Klassenanalyse@BRD“ - und in wissenschaftlichen Veranstaltungen, oft in Zusammenarbeit mit ihr verbundenen Institutionen ’in Ost und West’. Themen, Arbeitsweise und Ergebnisse werden kooperativ erarbeitet und öffentlich gemacht.

    Triviale und nicht-triviale Maschinen
    http://www.ibim.de/systems/1-grund/3-4.htm

    Von Foerster unterscheidet triviale und nicht-triviale Maschinen. Ein System ist eine „nicht-triviale“ Maschine, wenn bei Eingabe eines bestimmten Inputs nicht bekannt ist, welcher Output herauskommen wird. Wer als Städter schon mal die Aufgabe bekommen hat, eine Kuh auf die Weide zu treiben, wird wissen, was damit gemeint ist. Die Kuh hat ihren eigenen Kopf, zwar vorwiegend instinktgesteuert und von niedrigem Komplexitätsgrad. Aber trotzdem ist sie „nicht-trivial“: Ein Stockhieb auf ihr Hinterteil kann ganz unterschiedliche Reaktionen auslösen. Entweder sie geht schneller, geht zur Seite, schlägt aus, oder reagiert gar nicht.

    Peter Brödner : Eine neue Invasion der Robbies ?
    http://www.hda-online.net/hda-kolumnen/kolumne-peter-broedner/66-eine-neue-invasion-der-robbies.html

    Gerade wieder wird - so etwa jüngst auch im Spiegel Nr. 9/2015 - die Vision heraufbeschworen, dass eine neue Generation autonomer, lernfähiger Roboter und sog. »Multiagentensysteme« unsere Fabriken bevölkern wird. Miteinander vernetzt, sollen sie sich mittels kooperierender Interaktion zu »verteilter künstlicher Intelligenz« aufschwingen und veränderliche, komplexe Produktionsaufgaben bewältigen. Mit der Vorstellung solcher »intelligenter« Maschinen-Schwärme des »zweiten Maschinenzeitalters« (Brynjolfsson und McAfee) werden längst totgeglaubte Gespenster wieder belebt und Gefahren für Arbeit und Beschäftigung heraufbeschworen.

    Visionäre wie Apokalyptiker leiden freilich darunter, gegen Fakten immun zu sein. So werden stets aufs Neue technische Fähigkeiten übertrieben und fundamentale Unterschiede zwischen zwar anpassungsfähigem, aber algorithmisch determiniertem Verhalten digital gesteuerter Maschinen und autonom intentionalem Handeln von Menschen ignoriert. In positivistisch verengter Interpretation von »Embodiment« werden Roboter und »Multiagentensysteme« umstandslos mit lebendigen und einfühlsamen, zu Empatie und Reflexion ihres kontextbezogenen Erlebens und Handelns fähigen Körpern von Menschen gleichgesetzt. Übersehen wird dabei die naturwissenschaftlich begründete Differenz deterministischen Verhaltens zu intentional gesteuertem, Sinn erzeugendem menschlichen Handeln und Verstehen im Kontext sozialer Praxis.

    #politique #économie #syndicalisme #Allemagne #big_data #industrie_40 #sciences

  • Florence Nightingale, datajournalist: information has always been beautiful | News | The Guardian

    http://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2010/aug/13/florence-nightingale-graphics

    via Flore Jachimowicz sur Twitter

    Florence Nightingale and statistics - it turns out the two are intimately connected. Graphics are terribly trendy at the moment - and as data floods onto the web, this is a trend we heartily applaud, here at the datablog. But sometimes it’s good to know that it’s not entirely new.

    We all have an image of Nightingale - who died 100 years ago today - as a nurse, lady with the lamp, medical reformer and campaigner for soldiers’ health. But she was also a datajournalist.

    #cartographie #Cartographie_historique #cartoexperiment

  • Panama Papers: US launches crackdown on international tax evasion | News | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/news/2016/may/06/panama-papers-us-launches-crackdown-on-international-tax-evasion

    Barack Obama is launching a crackdown on international tax evasion in response to recent disclosures in the Panama Papers revealing the scale of offshore financial activity.

    In a series of initiatives announced by the White House on Thursday night, the president will take executive action to close loopholes used by foreigners in the US and call on Congress to pass legislation.
    […]
    There is no doubt that the problem of global tax avoidance generally is a huge problem,” Obama told reporters in an unscheduled appearance last month. “The problem is that a lot of this stuff is legal, not illegal.

    The initial package of measures outlined by the White House this week may not go as far as some campaigners wish, but focus largely on increasing transparency regulations as a tool to flush further offshore tax abuses into the open.

    These include:
    • immediate executive action to combat money laundering, terrorist financing, and tax evasion with tighter transparency rules
    • new treasury rules closing a loophole allowing foreigners to hide financial activity behind anonymous entities in the US
    • stricter “customer due diligence” rules for banks handling money of behalf of clients

  • Démocratie en #Ukraine : Le verdict du #Conseil_de_l'Europe
    http://www.taurillon.org/democratie-en-ukraine-le-verdict-du-conseil-de-l-europe

    Les élections locales en Ukraine ont eu lieu le 25 octobre 2015. Pendant que les municipalités votaient et qu’un certain nombre de citoyens n’avaient pas accès au vote, une délégation du Conseil de l’Europe faisait partie d’une mission d’observation menée par l’OSCE pour l’élection après l’invasion russe de la Crimée et une guerre civile qui a déchiré et déchire toujours la population. Retour sur le rapport de cette mission.

    Actualités

    / Ukraine, #Élections, Conseil de l’Europe

    http://www.lexpress.fr/actualites/1/monde/l-ukraine-guette-les-resultats-des-elections-locales-un-test-pour-le-pouvoi
    http://www.theguardian.com/news/live/2016/apr/04/panama-papers-global-reaction-to-huge-leak-of-offshore-tax-files-live
    https://wcd.coe.int/ViewDoc.jsp?p=&Ref=20151024-news-gudrun-ukraine&Language=lanEnglish&Ver=ori
    http://www.osce.org/odihr/elections/ukraine/177901?download=true
    http://elections-en-europe.net/calendrier-electoral-2015

  • « Panama Papers » : Comment « Le Monde » a travaillé sur plus de 11 millions de fichiers
    http://www.lemonde.fr/panama-papers/article/2016/04/03/panama-papers-comment-le-monde-a-travaille-sur-plus-de-11-millions-de-fichie

    Le Monde et 106 médias internationaux ont commencé dimanche 3 avril la publication des « Panama Papers », série de révélations sur les #paradis_fiscaux. Pendant près d’un an, nous avons travaillé sur une gigantesque #base_de_données interne du cabinet panaméen Mossack Fonseca, l’un des leaders mondiaux de la domiciliation de #sociétés_offshore.

  • Death penalty statistics, country by country in 2012 | visualisation and data | World news | The Guardian

    http://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2011/mar/29/death-penalty-countries-world

    Ça date de 2012 mais je référence pour l’exemple et la méthodo carto.

    After the execution of Kim Jong-un’s uncle, the brutality of North Korea’s regime has once again come under the international spotlight. In a broader context, is the attention warranted? Find out who uses the death penalty today - and see how it compares to 2007

    #droits_humains #peine_de_mort

  • Beitar Jerusalem fans: ’Here we are, the most racist football team in the country’ – video
    http://www.theguardian.com/news/video/2015/nov/24/beitar-jerusalem-most-racist-football-team-israel-video

    #Beitar Jerusalem is a symbol of rightwing #Israel. But in 2012-2013 the club signed two Chechen Muslim players, enraging Beitar’s hardcore fans, La Familia, some of whom sing of being racist. Some of Israel’s political leaders find La Familia embarrassing. But do they simply reflect a wider problem facing Israel – a polarised society?

    • From the forthcoming documentary and Kickstarter campaign, Forever Pure
    This video was amended on 26 November to more accurately reflect the translation of one section of conversation

  • Saudi Arabia unashamedly championed in UK security review | News | The Guardian

    http://www.theguardian.com/news/defence-and-security-blog/2015/nov/24/saudi-arabia-unashamedly-championed-in-uk-security-review

    In its trumpeting of Britain’s global “soft power” influence, the government’s Strategic Defence and Security Review (SDSR) unveiled on Monday contains a glaring contradiction.

    More than once, it stressed the importance of promoting “our values and interests ”, promoting “stability, good governance and human rights”, and “civil liberties”.

    Twenty pages on, the document says the UK will continue to work with close allies, including “vital partners, such as Saudi Arabia, in the Middle East”.

    #cool ! #arabie_saoudite

  • Forget El Niño, start worrying about the North Atlantic blob | News | The Guardian

    http://www.theguardian.com/news/2015/oct/18/north-atlantic-cold-jet-stream-el-nino

    The extra heat being generated in tropical seas by the strong El Niño is bleaching coral reefs and disrupting weather patterns in the Pacific. But will it affect Britain’s weather, and if so, how?

    This question is what climate scientists across the northern hemisphere are trying to answer, especially since it coincides with an exceptionally cold North Atlantic, which might be even more important because it affects the position of the jet stream.

    The easterly winds of last week, bringing unseasonably cold weather, are believed to be as a direct result of this North Atlantic cold diverting the jet stream and allowing cold easterly air from Siberia to reach our shores. There has already been snow in Germany.

    #climat #el_nino #météorologie

  • Why World Statistics Day is something worth celebrating | News | The Guardian

    http://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2015/oct/20/why-world-statistics-day-is-something-worth-celebrating

    We are living through a data revolution. It is changing our world. Our choices as individuals are increasingly informed by more and more complex sources of data. Businesses are making decisions drawing on diverse and sophisticated information systems. Governments are making laws and reforming public services with an ever widening evidence base at their disposal.

    However, there is still a lot to do before we can feel that we are, as a society, at ease in a data-rich world. We need to be much less tolerant of those who use numbers in ways that mislead, either deliberately or inadvertently. We should hold accountable those in positions of authority who act without drawing on the data that could inform their decisions. Decisions are judgments but assessment of the evidence can reduce the risk of making a terrible mistake.

    #statistiques #data #big_data #visualisation #données

  • Maps reveal Amsterdam’s many faces | News | The Guardian

    http://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2015/jul/30/maps-reveal-amsterdam-many-faces

    Maps of cities are great. By visualising information about a place you can see geographical patterns that can yield dozens of insights.

    The city of Amsterdam clearly agrees. The municipal authority has put together a collection of about 70 maps of the capital of the Netherlands.

    The batch of cartography covers everything from the city’s solar panels to its Airbnb prices and even the breeding grounds of swifts, sparrows and starlings.

    #urban_matters #cartographie #ville #agglomérations #amsterdam

  • Comment les réseaux sociaux ont fait de nous des touristes de nos propres vies
    http://www.courrierinternational.com/article/2015/03/06/comment-les-reseaux-sociaux-ont-fait-de-nous-des-touristes-de

    Les réseaux sociaux ont pris une place telle que certains d’entre nous sont passés maîtres dans l’art de détecter un parfait « moment Facebook » : trouver la situation, la phrase ou la scène qui fera le meilleur post Facebook, celui qui récoltera le plus de « likes ». Idem pour les articles de presse que nous partageons sur les réseaux sociaux. « Je pourrais me justifier en disant que j’ai envie de partager des informations avec les autres, mais ce serait mentir, confesse le journaliste. La vérité est plus déprimante et se trouve plutôt du côté de l’ego : il s’agit avant tout de narcissisme. Le but est d’avoir l’air cool, intelligent et bien informé. »

    Résumé de http://www.theguardian.com/news/2015/feb/26/pics-or-it-didnt-happen-mantra-instagram-era-facebook-twitter

    • En même temps, puisqu’il sait ce qu’il cherche, il n’a pas à aller loin pour trouver ce qu’il cherche. Je viens d’essayer « john snow doctor » dans Gougoule, et voilà, aucune trace de Game of Thrones.

      Par ailleurs, même quand on tape « John Snow », Gougoule suggestionne d’autres termes pour compléter la recherche : la première est « John Snow Cholera ».

      Franchement franchement, je crois que Crouzet se moque du monde, là.

    • En fait, ça renvoie à une discussion sur une critique exactement inverse, qu’on a eu je crois ici sur Seenthis il y a quelques années (si on retrouve… peut-être sujet démarré par @davduf). La critique portait sur le fait que Google personnalisait les résultats selon chaque utilisateur, ses thèmes de prédilection supposés.

      De fait, la critique était exactement inverse : plutôt que de reprocher à Google de proposer les pages qui correspondent à l’intérêt du plus grand nombre, on lui reprochait au contraire de proposer des pages personnalisées. Dans les deux cas, ça revient à reprocher à Google de nuire à la sérendipité du Web.

      Je me souviens que mon point de vue (et en gros c’est pareil aujourd’hui) n’allait pas vraiment dans le sens de la majorité : pour moi Google n’est pas un outil de sérendipité. C’est un outil, dont le but est de trouver ce que l’utilisateur cherche. Donc (1) un outil ça se maîtrise, et si l’outil livre lui-même des outils pour affiner les recherches, il faut les utiliser, pas critiquer le résultat le plus grossier (2) le but est de permettre aux utilisateurs de trouver, pas espérer faire cliquer 10 millions de personnes qui recherchent des infos sur Game of Thrones sur la page Wikipédia d’un médecin anglais du XIXe siècle.

      Tiens, en revanche, je trouve que Wikipédia est généralement un assez bon outil de sérendipité. :-))

    • C’est surtout parce qu’un grand nombre a cherché « john snow » en voulant trouver le perso du trône de fer et qu’ils ont ensuite cliqué sur des liens convenant à leur recherche qu’il y a eu occultation.
      Simple algorithmique.
      Quand on ignore l’orthographe d’un nom, ça donne cela.
      (et encore, google n’ajoute pas l’homophonie dans sa recherche, car seul le croud finding leur suffit à présent)

    • Hé chouette Thierry, c’est sympa.

      Du coup, je te propose un nouvel argument de discussion. Tu utilises le docteur John Snow, opposé au phénomène de mode Jon Snow, pour une démonstration qui rejoindrait la « techno-critique », et ce que tu nommes une « fabrique de l’Histoire ».

      Le fait est que si tu as cherché le docteur John Snow, ce n’est certainement pas parce que tu le tires de ta propre culture classique et « livresque », mais parce que ce sujet est lui-même extrêmement à la mode. (Si si.) Comme @fil l’a indiqué ci-dessus, c’est un sujet largement abordé sur Seenthis par exemple.

      Notamment :
      – John Snow est l’exemple type utilisé pour faire la propagande du « data-journalism », sujet extrêmement à la mode dans… les médias (parce que ça les concerne directement) :
      http://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2013/mar/15/john-snow-cholera-map
      – John Snow est également l’exemple type utilisé pour faire la propagande des algorithmes « prédictifs » de Google. C’est un thème qui a maintenant quelques années :
      http://seedmagazine.com/content/article/predicting_outbreaks
      – John Snow est encore un exemple type de l’importance d’un autre sujet particulièrement à la mode : la visualisation des données :
      http://www.peachpit.com/articles/article.aspx?p=2048358

      Bref, le choix de chercher le docteur John Snow est lui-même extrêmement déterminé. C’est un sujet lui même tout à fait « à la mode » sur le Web, et certains des responsables de cette mode – parce que l’évolution de leur propre économie repose en partie dessus – sont parmi les plus puissants vecteurs de « création de l’Histoire » : les médias et Google.

      Du coup, ces histoires de points d’eau contaminés et de choléra, c’est même présent dans beaucoup de séries télé récentes. Encore la semaine dernière, je suis tombé sur cet épisode de Ripper Street :
      http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2393293
      qui donc renvoie à :
      http://youngfoundation.org/health-wellbeing-ageing/removing-the-pump-handle-of-poor-health-early-action-at-barts-healt

      Tout ça pour faire remarquer que, si tu interroges les déterminants qui t’ont amené à effectuer une recherche sur le docteur John Snow, tu arrives plus ou moins forcément à la conclusion qu’il s’agit également d’une forme de « massification » culturelle, et que celle-ci est également une « fabrique de l’Histoire » très récente, et qu’elle est largement aussi « commerciale » que l’autre, puisque déterminée par les intérêts économiques les plus puissants de notre temps.