• Les leçons des élections municipales au Brésil
    https://pardem.org/actualite/1090-les-lecons-des-elections-municipales-au-bresil

    Dimanche 29 novembre 2020, pour le second tour des municipales au Brésil, environ 38 millions de Brésiliens, (soit un quart du corps électoral), étaient appelés à élire pour quatre ans les maires et conseillers municipaux de 57 villes dont 18 des 26 capitales d’État.


    La politique néolibérale de Bolsonaro a plongé le pays dans la récession et a provoqué un niveau record de chômage, avec 14 millions de sans-emploi. Le néolibéralisme de Bolsonaro a, comme partout où ces politiques s’appliquent, fait des coupes sombres dans la santé, l’éducation, les transports publics ou le logement, mais aussi poussé les villes à l’endettement, la corruption et la violence. Le plus grand pays d’Amérique latine, où la pandémie de Covid-19 a fait plus de 172 000 morts en huit mois, voit arriver une deuxième vague de coronavirus.

    Avec ce bilan catastrophique pour le peuple brésilien, certains s’attendaient, lors de ces élections municipales, à la déroute de la « droite » et au retour de la « gauche » dans les mairies.

    Bolsonarisme et droites diverses
    Certes, ces municipales indiquent un ample reflux de la vague qui avait porté Jair Bolsonaro au pouvoir en 2018, mais c’est le « centre-droit » qui rafle la mise… Et de loin car il s’empare de la presque totalité des mairies. Par exemple, dans l’État de Bahia, les trois principales villes sont dorénavant aux mains de la droite et du centre-droit ,compatibles avec le bolsonarisme. La capitale du Maranhгo, Sгo Luнs, sera dirigée par Eduardo Braide, allié de Bolsonaro.

    Les villes-capitales Maceio (Alagoas), Aracaju (Sergipe), Fortaleza (Cearб) et Recife (Pernambuco) seront dirigées par des maires « centre-gauche modéré » (PSB, PDT) compatibles avec la droite.

    La victoire a été sans appel dans les deux plus grandes villes du pays. A São Paulo (12,5 millions d’habitants), ville la plus riche du Brésil, le maire sortant Bruno Covas a été reconduit avec près de 60 % des voix, contre 40,62 % à Guilherme Boulos (PSOL). Et à Rio de Janeiro, Eduardo Paes, a remporté 64,07 % des voix, infligeant une défaite cinglante à l’impopulaire maire sortant Marcelo Crivella (35,93 %), ex-pasteur évangélique. Celui-ci est l’un des 13 candidats soutenus par Bolsonaro dont 11 ont été battus.
Analyser, plus en détail, les résultats du centre-droit n’a pas d’interêt car le découpage centre-droit, centre-gauche, droite et bolsonarisme est artificiel, tous ces partis menant la même politique.

    Déroute de la « gauche »
    Pour la première fois depuis le retour de la démocratie au Brésil (1985), le Parti des travailleurs (PT) de l’ex-président Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva n’a pas remporté une seule capitale des 26 États de la fédération. Le PT n’a même pas pu arracher dans le Pernambouc (nord-est), Recife, bastion de la gauche et seule capitale qui était à sa portée. Le PT a disputé quinze seconds tours et n’a remporté que quatre villes, toutes de plus de cent mille habitants : Contagem et Juiz de Fora dans l’État du Minas Gerais, Diadema et Maua dans celui de Sao Paulo. Sur le plan national, le PT passe de 630 maires élus en 2012 à 183 au 1er janvier 2021. 

    Le PT ne représente plus que 2,9 % de l’électorat du pays et moins de 5 % dans le Nordeste, fief de la gauche. L’ensemble des partis de gauche n’arrive pas à 10 % des voix.
Nationalement, le PSOL (petit parti de gauche de gauche), ne dirigera que cinq villes, dont Belém, capitale du Parб, État ou les inégalités sociales, la pression des grands propriétaires terriens et la déforestation sont les plus violentes. Edmilson Rodrigues a conquis la mairie avec une liste plurielle (PSOL, PT, PCdoB, PDT, PCB, Rede, UP).

    Quelles leçons en tirer ?
    – La première leçon est connue mais doit être rappelée. Les politiques néolibérales, désastreuses pour les classes dominées et ravageuses pour les plus pauvres, ne les conduisent pas « automatiquement » à voter à gauche.

    – La deuxième leçon est évidente mais niée par tous les partis « de gauche » du système. Il ne suffit pas, lorsqu’on a le pouvoir, d’améliorer le quotidien des gens en acceptant les limites fixées par le système néolibéral.

    – La troisième est sans appel : Les citoyens refusent le clivage « gauche-droite », artificiel, les « deux camps » appliquant la même politique.

    – La quatrième est claire : sans rupture complète et immédiate avec le néolibéralisme (et le capitalisme) pas de victoire possible des partis de gauche.

    Joël Perichaud

    #Brésil #Bolsonaro #PT #gauche #néolibéralisme #élections

  • Facebook Struggles to Balance Civility and Growth
    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/24/technology/facebook-election-misinformation.html

    Employees and executives are battling over how to reduce misinformation and hate speech without hurting the company’s bottom line. SAN FRANCISCO — In the tense days after the presidential election, a team of Facebook employees presented the chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, with an alarming finding : Election-related misinformation was going viral on the site. President Trump was already casting the election as rigged, and stories from right-wing media outlets with false and misleading (...)

    #Facebook #algorithme #manipulation #élections

  • Quelques précisions sur le jugement d’annulation de l’élection municipale de #Crest
    https://ricochets.cc/Quelques-precisions-sur-le-jugement-d-annulation-de-l-election-municipale-

    Le tribunal administratif de Grenoble a prononcé l’annulation de l’élection municpale de Crest. Mr Mariton ayant fait appel, ce jugement est suspendu pour l’instant. On observe que Mr Mariton se défend souvent dans la presse en affirmant que ce qui lui est reproché ne concerne, selon lui, que des bonnes actions pour la ville sans arrière pensée ni en profitant que tout était à l’arrêt du fait de la pandémie. Ce n’est pas l’avis, motivé, du tribunal de Grenoble. Mais par ailleurs, quand on voit le (...) #Les_Articles

    / Crest, #Elections_locales

    http://le-crestois.fr/images/breves_2020/Jugement_prostestation_electorale.pdf

  • The Obama Campaign’s Digital Masterminds Cash In
    https://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/23/magazine/the-obama-campaigns-digital-masterminds-cash-in.html

    Earlier this year, senior members of President Barack Obama’s campaign team took a trip to Las Vegas. Nevada holds a special place in Obama-wonk lore as the place where his monthslong strategy of defeating Hillary Clinton by slowly and surely amassing delegates emerged. But the operatives were not there in March for any political reason. They were there to make money — specifically to land what they hoped would be the first corporate client for their new advertising business, Analytics Media (...)

    #algorithme #élections #marketing #notation #profiling #BigData

  • Les vies privées de Bernard E. Harcourt
    https://www.franceinter.fr/emissions/l-heure-bleue/l-heure-bleue-17-novembre-2020

    Entre « privacy » et « privation », les frontières sont poreuses, surtout lorsqu’il est question de numérique. Le professeur en droit à l’université Columbia Bernard E. Harcourt, auteur de « La société d’exposition » (Seuil) décrypte ce soir comment nous nous sommes auto-privés de notre intimité et liberté, à l’ère digitale. Que ce soit sur les réseaux sociaux, ou dans la vie quotidienne, en payant par exemple en carte bancaire ou en utilisant notre carte vitale, nous consentons de plus en plus à ce que des (...)

    #militaire #élections #surveillance

  • Facebook’s threat to the NYU Ad Observatory is an attack on ethical research »
    https://www.niemanlab.org/2020/10/facebooks-threat-to-the-nyu-ad-observatory-is-an-attack-on-ethical-resear

    Facebook may defend its actions on the grounds of user privacy, but its real concern is losing control of how the company is scrutinized. Late last week, Facebook sent a legal threat to the NYU Ad Observatory, a research project that collects and studies political ads on Facebook. The timing of this threat could not be worse. The Ad Observatory is one of the best sources available to understand how political advertisements on being deployed on social media. But the threat is also is a (...)

    #Facebook #algorithme #élections #données #enseignement #publicité

    ##publicité

  • Zeynep Tufekci : Trump Proved That Authoritarians Can Get Elected in America - The Atlantic
    https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/11/trump-proved-authoritarians-can-get-elected-america/617023

    Trump was ineffective and easily beaten. A future strongman won’t be.
    November 6, 2020
    Zeynep Tufekci

    Now that Joe Biden has won the presidency, we can expect debates over whether Donald Trump was an aberration (“not who we are!”) or another instantiation of America’s pathologies and sins. One can reasonably make a case for his deep-rootedness in American traditions, while also noticing the anomalies: the early-morning tweeting, the fondness for mixing personal and government business, the obsession with ratings befitting a reality-TV star—the one job he was good at.

    From an international perspective, though, Trump is just one more example of the many populists on the right who have risen to power around the world: Narendra Modi in India, Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil, Viktor Orbán in Hungary, Vladimir Putin in Russia, Jarosław Kaczyński in Poland, and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in Turkey, my home country. These people win elections but subvert democratic norms: by criminalizing dissent, suppressing or demonizing the media, harassing the opposition, and deploying extra-legal mechanisms whenever possible (Putin’s opponents have a penchant for meeting tragic accidents). Orbán proudly uses the phrase illiberal democracy to describe the populism practiced by these men; Trump has many similarities to them, both rhetorically and policy-wise.
    More by this writer

    He campaigned like they did, too, railing against the particular form of globalization that dominates this era and brings benefit to many, but disproportionately to the wealthy, leaving behind large numbers of people, especially in wealthier countries. He relied on the traditional herrenvolk idea of ethnonationalist populism: supporting a kind of welfare state, but only for the “right” people rather than the undeserving others (the immigrants, the minorities) who allegedly usurp those benefits. He channeled and fueled the widespread mistrust of many centrist-liberal democratic institutions (the press, most notably) —just like the other populists. And so on.

    But there’s one key difference between Trump and everyone else on that list. The others are all talented politicians who win elections again and again.

    In contrast, Trump is a reality-TV star who stumbled his way into an ongoing realignment in American politics, aided by a series of events peculiar to 2016 that were fortunate for him: The Democrats chose a polarizing nominee who didn’t have the requisite political touch that can come from surviving tough elections; social media was, by that point, deeply entrenched in the country’s politics, but its corrosive effects were largely unchecked; multiple players—such as then–FBI Director James Comey—took consequential actions fueled by their misplaced confidence in Hillary Clinton’s win; and Trump’s rivals in the Republican primaries underestimated him. He drew a royal flush.

    It’s not that he is completely without talent. His rallies effectively let him bond with his base, and test out various messages with the crowd that he would then amplify everywhere. He has an intuitive understanding of the power of attention, and he played the traditional media like a fiddle—they benefited from his antics, which they boosted. He also clearly sensed the political moment in 2016, and managed to navigate his way into the presidency, though that probably had more to do with instinct than with deep planning.

    Luck aside, though, Trump is not good at his job. He doesn’t even seem to like it much. He is too undisciplined and thin-skinned to be effective at politics over a sustained period, which involves winning repeated elections. He seems to have been as surprised as anyone else that he won in 2016. While he hates the loser branding that will follow him now, he’s probably fine with the outcome—especially since he can blame it on fantastical conspiracies involving theft or ballot-stuffing or the courts—as long as he can figure out how to escape the criminal trials that are certainly coming his way. (A self-pardon? A negotiated pardon? He will try something.)

    Trump ran like a populist, but he lacked the political talent or competence to govern like an effective one. Remember the Infrastructure Week he promised? It never happened. Remember the trade wars with China he said he’d win? Some tariffs were raised here and there, but the jobs that would bring relief to America’s decimated manufacturing sector never resurged. In Wisconsin in 2018, the president announced “the eighth wonder of the world”—a Foxconn factory that was supposed to employ 13,000 in return for $4.5 billion in government subsidies. However, going into this election, the building remained empty, and the president lost Wisconsin in the Electoral College. (Foxconn hired people in the final weeks of 2019 to fulfill quotas for the subsidies, and laid off many of them right after the new year.) Most populists globally deploy wide patronage networks: state spending that boosts their own supporters. Trump’s model remained attached more to personal graft: He encouraged people to stay in his hotels and have dinner at Mar-a-Lago in exchange for access, rather than develop a broad and participatory network that would remain loyal to him for years. And when the pandemic hit, instead of rising to the occasion and playing the strongman, rallying the country through a crisis that had originated in China—an opportunity perfect for the kind of populist he aspired to be—he floundered.

    Erdoğan has been in power nationally since 2003. After two decades, he has arguably lost some of his political magic, evinced by increasing missteps and a deteriorating situation around democratic rights. Still, he is among the most talented politicians in Turkey’s history. He has been able to navigate multiple challenges, including a previous global financial crisis. In Russia, Putin has won many elections, even managing to subvert term limits. In India, Modi has also been reelected. One could argue that these elections were far from perfect, but they were elections. Brazil’s Bolsonaro has bungled his country’s response to the pandemic but is giving the poor emergency aid and increasing his popularity. The CARES Act did the same thing, providing a significant subsidy to businesses and improving household finances, especially for people with low incomes, but it ended right before the election; Trump erratically tweeted about having nuked a new deal.

    I suspect that the Republican leadership is sanguine, if not happy, about Trump’s loss. It’s striking how quickly Fox News called Arizona for Biden, and how many Republican leaders have condemned the president’s rage-tweeting and attempts to stop the count. They know that Trump is done, and they seem fine with it. For them, what’s not to like? The Supreme Court is solidly in their corner; they will likely retain control of the Senate; House Republicans won more seats than they were projected to; and they are looking at significant gains in state Houses as well, giving them control over redistricting for the next decade. Even better for their long-term project, they have diversified their own coalition, gaining more women candidates and more support from nonwhite voters.

    And they have at their disposal certain features that can be mobilized: The Electoral College and especially the Senate are anti-majoritarian institutions, and they can be combined with other efforts to subvert majority rule. Leaders and parties can engage in voter suppression and break norms with some degree of bipartisan cooperation across the government. In combination, these features allow for players to engage in a hardball kind of minority rule: Remember that no Republican president has won the popular vote since 2004, and that the Senate is structurally prone to domination by a minority. Yet Republicans have tremendous power. This dynamic occurs at the local level, too, where gerrymandering allows Republicans to inflate their representation in state legislatures.

    The situation is a perfect setup, in other words, for a talented politician to run on Trumpism in 2024. A person without the eager Twitter fingers and greedy hotel chains, someone with a penchant for governing rather than golf. An individual who does not irritate everyone who doesn’t already like him, and someone whose wife looks at him adoringly instead of slapping his hand away too many times in public. Someone who isn’t on tape boasting about assaulting women, and who says the right things about military veterans. Someone who can send appropriate condolences about senators who die, instead of angering their state’s voters, as Trump did, perhaps to his detriment, in Arizona. A norm-subverting strongman who can create a durable majority and keep his coalition together to win more elections.

    Make no mistake: The attempt to harness Trumpism—without Trump, but with calculated, refined, and smarter political talent—is coming. And it won’t be easy to make the next Trumpist a one-term president. He will not be so clumsy or vulnerable. He will get into office less by luck than by skill. Perhaps it will be Senator Josh Hawley, who is writing a book against Big Tech because he knows that will be the next chapter in the culture wars, with social-media companies joining “fake news” as the enemy. Perhaps it will be Senator Tom Cotton, running as a law-and-order leader with a populist bent. Maybe it will be another media figure: Tucker Carlson or Joe Rogan, both men with talent and followings. Perhaps it will be another Sarah Palin—she was a prototype—with the charisma and appeal but without the baggage and the need for a presidential candidate to pluck her out of the blue. Perhaps someone like the QAnon-supporting Representative-elect Lauren Boebert of Colorado, who first beat the traditional Republican representative in the primary and then ran her race with guns blazing, mask off, and won against the Democratic candidate, a retired professor who avoided campaigning in person. Indeed, a self-made charismatic person coming out of nowhere probably has a better chance than many establishment figures in the party.

    What can be done? First and foremost, we need to realize the nature of the problem and accept that elite failure cannot be responded to with more of the same. A good deal of the Democratic Party’s messaging has been wrapped in nostalgia. But populism’s resurgence is a symptom of the failures of the past. Pearl-clutching for the good old days will not get us out of this. Yes, it’s important to highlight the value of norms and call for the restoration of democratic institutions. But what we need in order to move forward goes beyond more politeness and the right rhetoric. The failures of the past aren’t to be yearned for. They’re to be avoided and, crucially, understood and fixed. There will be arguments about how to rebuild a politics that can appeal to the moment, and how to mobilize for the future. There should be. Our American crisis cannot be resolved in one sweeping article that offers easy solutions. But the first step is to realize how deep this hole is for democracies around the world, including ours, and to realize that what lies ahead is not some easy comeback.

    At the moment, the Democratic Party risks celebrating Trump’s loss and moving on—an acute danger, especially because many of its constituencies, the ones that drove Trump’s loss, are understandably tired. A political nap for a few years probably looks appealing to many who opposed Trump, but the real message of this election is not that Trump lost and Democrats triumphed. It’s that a weak and untalented politician lost, while the rest of his party has completely entrenched its power over every other branch of government: the perfect setup for a talented right-wing populist to sweep into office in 2024. And make no mistake: They’re all thinking about it.

    We want to hear what you think about this article. Submit a letter to the editor or write to letters@theatlantic.com.
    Zeynep Tufekci is a contributing writer at The Atlantic and an associate professor at the University of North Carolina. She studies the interaction between digital technology, artificial intelligence, and society.

    #Zeynep_Tufekci #Elections #Politique_US #Autoritarisme

  • Facebook Tested a New A.I.-Powered Misinformation Detector Months Before the Election
    https://onezero.medium.com/facebook-tested-a-new-a-i-powered-misinformation-detector-months-bef

    It’s unclear whether the platform adopted the new approach Months ahead of the 2020 election, Facebook revealed it had created a better way to identify bad actors on the platform. Published in August 2020, the research details a system Facebook was testing that might seem incredibly simple : Instead of just looking at an account’s posting history or friend list to determine whether that account is a fake or inauthentic account, look at both the friend list and the post history. On (...)

    #Facebook #algorithme #manipulation #élections #modération

  • Facebook’s Metric For “Violence And Incitement Trends" Is Rising
    https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ryanmac/facebook-internal-metric-violence-incitement-rising-vote

    The metric, which assesses the potential for danger based on keywords, rose to 580 from 400 this week — a 45% increase. As votes are being tallied across the country to determine the next US president, internal Facebook data shows that the company has seen a significant increase in what it calls “violence and incitement trends.” In a post to a group on Facebook’s internal message board, one employee alerted their colleagues to a nearly 45% increase in the metric, which assesses the potential (...)

    #Facebook #algorithme #élections #violence #profiling #surveillance

  • Présidentielles US : Fraude électorale dans le Wisconsin ? Analyse d’une Fake News – par Olivier Berruyer
    https://www.les-crises.fr/presidentielles-us-fraude-electorale-dans-le-wisconsin-analyse-d-une-fake

    Aujourd’hui, nous allons vous parler des rumeurs de fraude électorale au Wisconsin lors de la présidentielle américaine. Non pas tant pour l’importance du fait, mais plutôt comme une illustration de la manipulation au temps des réseaux sociaux, où les gens ne vérifient plus rien… I. L’exemple de la vraie fausse participation Les infox (fake news) se sont multipliées sur le Wisconsin. Les choses ont démarré avec cette rumeur, reprise ici par @AlexJungleView : le taux de participation aurait été de… 101 %, en rapportant 3 170 206 votes aux 3 129 000 votants enregistrés !Lire la suite

    #Politique #désinformation #Elections_américaines #Propagande #Politique,_désinformation,_Elections_américaines,_Propagande

  • QAnon and the Emergence of the Unreal
    https://jods.mitpress.mit.edu/pub/tliexqdu/release/4

    Ethan Zuckerman delves into how the conspiracist community surrounding QAnon represents a hazardous new form of participatory civics and digital storytelling. The Grass Valley Charter School in northern California teaches 500 students from kindergarten to eighth grade using principles from Outward Bound and other “active learning” methods. Recently the school has been in the news not because of its pedagogy, but due to the effects of an unusual eruption of unreality. On May 11, 2019, the (...)

    #manipulation #élections #extrême-droite #QAnon #SocialNetwork

  • How Donald Trump Changed the Internet
    https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2020/10/trump-internet-memes-section-230-disinformation-reddit/616890

    How the president changed life online—for better and for worse Being online has changed Donald Trump. He was the internet’s candidate in 2016—he appears in Urban Dictionary’s definition of meme god—and his campaign leveraged the power of Facebook advertising to beat Hillary Clinton. Since then, he’s become even more obsessed with petty grievances and conspiracy theories that play well on Twitter, a platform used by just 22 percent of the American population. On several occasions, the president (...)

    #Reddit #manipulation #élections #harcèlement #publicité #QAnon #extrême-droite

    ##publicité

  • 🇺🇸 États-Unis : des #élections en temps de crise | Lutte de Classe n°211 - novembre 2020 (18  octobre 2020)
    https://mensuel.lutte-ouvriere.org//2020/10/25/etats-unis-des-elections-en-temps-de-crise_152434.html

    – Un système électoral bien peu démocratique
    – La #Cour_suprême et le droit à l’avortement
    #Trump  : démagogie tous azimuts
    #Biden  : un autre style au service de la même classe
    – Des tensions politiques bien au-delà des joutes électorales
    – L’#extrême_droite se manifeste
    – La nécessité d’un parti de la classe ouvrière

    #présidentielle_américaine #états-unis

  • Running Political Ads on Google That Spread Disinformation Is Still Really Easy - Patrick Berlinquette
    https://onezero.medium.com/running-political-ads-on-google-that-spread-disinformation-is-still-

    Why won’t Google change the algorithm ? In July, I performed an experiment to see how easy it was to run ads on Google that made false claims about Joe Biden. First, in the Google Ads system, I bought the keyword “should I vote for Biden ?” Then I told Google I wanted to run this ad : Within an hour, Google accepted the ad, and it was up and running. It served (usually in the top position) on the results pages for people across the United States when they Googled “should I vote for Biden ?” (...)

    #Google #algorithme #manipulation #élections #modération #publicité

    ##publicité

  • Facebook Manipulated the News You See to Appease Republicans, Insiders Say
    https://www.motherjones.com/media/2020/10/facebook-mother-jones

    Sources tell us the platform tweaked its code to help right-wing publishers and throttle sites like Mother Jones. Near the close of the first year of the Trump presidency, executives at Facebook were briefed on some major changes to its News Feed—the code that determines which of the zillions of posts on the platform any one of us is shown when we look at Facebook. The story the company has publicly told is that it was working to “bring people closer together” by showing us more posts from (...)

    #Facebook #algorithme #manipulation #élections #extrême-droite #discrimination

  • Facebook s’oppose à un projet de recherche sur le ciblage publicitaire politique
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/fil-dactualites/241020/facebook-s-oppose-un-projet-de-recherche-sur-le-ciblage-publicitaire-polit

    Facebook a demandé à l’université de New York (NYU) de mettre fin à un projet de recherche sur ses pratiques en termes de ciblage des publicités politiques, parce qu’il enfreint son règlement en collectant les données des utilisateurs de la plateforme.

    Facebook a demandé à l’université de New York (NYU) de mettre fin à un projet de recherche sur ses pratiques en termes de ciblage des publicités politiques, parce qu’il enfreint son règlement en collectant les données des utilisateurs de la plateforme.

    « Il y a une semaine, Facebook m’a envoyé une lettre pour nous demander de retirer (l’extension) AdObserver et de supprimer nos données », a tweeté vendredi Laura Edelson, étudiante en thèse et chercheuse du NYU Ad Observatory (« observatoire de la publicité »).

    A dix jours des élections américaines, le géant des réseaux sociaux est plus que jamais scruté et critiqué pour son rôle dans la campagne et la façon dont différents groupes politiques se servent des outils à leur diposition sur Facebook pour influencer des électeurs.

    « Le public a le droit de savoir comme les pubs politiques sont ciblées, donc nous n’obéirons pas à cette requête », poursuit Laura Edelson avant d’inviter chacun à installer AdObserver via un lien.

    L’extension (« plugin ») peut être installée sur un navigateur internet et copie les publicités vues sur Facebook dans une base de données publique, à des fins de transparence et de recherche sur le ciblage publicitaire, c’est-à-dire quels profils sont visés par quels types d’annonces.

    « Nous avons informé NYU il y a des mois qu’un projet de récolte des informations Facebook des gens enfreignait nos règles » a répondu Joe Osborne, un porte-parole du groupe.

    « Notre bibliothèque publicitaire, consultée par 2 millions de personnes tous les mois, y compris NYU, fournit plus de transparence sur les publicités politiques que la télévision, la radio ou toute autre plateforme numérique », a-t-il continué.

    L’entreprise californienne, après s’être montrée très permissive en la matière, a largement durci ses règles en matière de publicités politiques depuis un an.

    Elle a notamment interdit les tentatives de sape du processus électoral, ou certaines déclarations racistes ou xénophobes.

    Aucune nouvelle publicité politique ne pourra être diffusée sur ses plateformes dans la semaine précédant l’élection, et toutes les publicités sur des sujets de société ou de politique seront interdites aux Etats-Unis à la fermeture des bureaux de vote le 3 novembre.

    Mais « nos analyses montrent que les algorithmes de transparence de Facebook sont faillibles et laissent régulièrement passer des pubs politiques, qui ne sont alors pas inclues dans les archives », a indiqué Laura Edelson sur le site du projet.

    Facebook a donné jusqu’à fin novembre à NYU pour mettre fin à ce projet, sans préciser les conséquences dans le cas contraire.
    #Facebook #censure #données #élections #microtargeting #publicité

    ##publicité

  • Facebook Seeks Shutdown of NYU Research Project Into Political Ad Targeting
    https://www.morningstar.com/news/dow-jones/2020102311030/facebook-seeks-shutdown-of-nyu-research-project-into-political-ad-targe

    Facebook Inc. is demanding that a New York University research project cease collecting data about its political-ad targeting practices, setting up a fight with academics seeking to study the platform without the company’s permission. The dispute involves the NYU Ad Observatory, a project launched last month by the university’s engineering school that has recruited more than 6,500 volunteers to use a specially designed browser extension to collect data about the political ads Facebook shows (...)

    #Facebook #censure #élections #microtargeting #publicité

    ##publicité
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  • #Crest : l’élection municipale de Mr Mariton annulée par la cour administrative de Grenoble
    https://ricochets.cc/Crest-election-municipale-2020-de-Mr-Mariton-annulee-par-la-cour-administr

    Depuis le temps qu’il se dit dans le Crestois que ce mandat maritonien est celui de trop... De manière inattendue, le jugement du tribunal administratif de Grenoble n’a pas suivi l’analyse du rapporteur public et décide d’annuler l’élection de Mr Mariton aux municipales de Crest 2020 ! Une bonne nouvelle, un espoir (Mr Mariton fera sûrement appel auprès du Conseil d’Etat, rien n’est acquis), tant la perspective de subir 6 ans supplémentaires d’une petite tyrannie maritonnienne répétitive, ennuyeuse et (...) #Les_Articles

    / Crest, #Elections_locales

  • « Réélire Donald Trump serait un changement du cours de l’histoire »
    https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2020/10/19/jill-lepore-reelire-donald-trump-serait-un-changement-du-cours-de-l-histoire

    L’historienne Jill Lepore raconte, dans un entretien au « Monde », la première expérience d’analyse de données à des fins politiques aux Etats-Unis, conçue en 1959 pour faire élire John Kennedy. Selon elle, le recours important aux mathématiques dans la politique américaine a conduit à à la situation actuelle, « où nous sommes tous tellement segmentés et microciblés que nous n’avons plus le sens du bien commun ». Historienne prolifique, Jill Lepore est aussi professeure à Harvard et journaliste au New (...)

    #CambridgeAnalytica/Emerdata #Simulmatics #algorithme #élections #données #DataBrokers #microtargeting (...)

    ##CambridgeAnalytica/Emerdata ##profiling

  • La charte des oligarques
    https://laviedesidees.fr/La-charte-des-oligarques.html

    Avec la disparition du régime censitaire et l’instauration du suffrage universel, la participation #Politique dans nos sociétés démocratiques ne devrait plus être conditionnée à la propriété. Et pourtant, montre Timothy Kuhner, la politique reste inféodée au capital.

    #démocratie #représentation_politique #élections #propriété #Public_Books #argent #climate_change
    https://laviedesidees.fr/IMG/docx/en_kuhner_20102020.docx
    https://laviedesidees.fr/IMG/pdf/20201020-kuhner.pdf
    https://laviedesidees.fr/IMG/docx/20201020-kuhner.docx

  • Cyber Command has sought to disrupt the world’s largest botnet, hoping to reduce its potential impact on the election
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/cyber-command-trickbot-disrupt/2020/10/09/19587aae-0a32-11eb-a166-dc429b380d10_story.html

    In recent weeks, the U.S. military has mounted an operation to temporarily disrupt what is described as the world’s largest botnet — one used also to drop ransomware, which officials say is one of the top threats to the 2020 election. U.S. Cyber Command’s campaign against the Trickbot botnet, an army of at least 1 million hijacked computers run by Russian-speaking criminals, is not expected to permanently dismantle the network, said four U.S. officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity (...)

    #Intel #Microsoft #DoD #ransomware #spyware #bot #criminalité #hacking #élections

    ##criminalité

  • Élections américaines : entre Facebook et Trump, un mariage de réseau
    https://www.telerama.fr/idees/elections-americaines-entre-facebook-et-trump-un-mariage-de-reseau-6712640.

    Son patron, Mark Zuckerberg, a beau s’en défendre, Facebook est accusé de faire le lit du conspirationnisme et le jeu de Donald Trump, plus conciliant à son égard que le camp démocrate. Au point d’avoir scellé un pacte avec le président ? Octobre 2019 : alors qu’il est à Washington pour être cuisiné par le Congrès, Mark Zuckerberg reçoit une invitation informelle à dîner. Pas n’importe où : au 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. À la Maison-Blanche. De cette réception en comité restreint, il ne filtrera rien, ni le (...)

    #CambridgeAnalytica/Emerdata #Facebook #manipulation #élections #extrême-droite

    ##CambridgeAnalytica/Emerdata

  • L’implication de Cambridge Analytica dans la campagne du Brexit était limitée… tout comme l’efficacité de ses outils
    https://www.lemonde.fr/pixels/article/2020/10/08/l-implication-de-cambridge-analytica-dans-la-campagne-du-brexit-etait-limite

    Une enquête britannique conclut que l’entreprise au cœur du scandale de vol de données personnelles n’avait développé aucune technologie innovante. Cambridge Analytica « n’a effectué qu’un travail limité pour la campagne [pro-Brexit] Leave.eu, au-delà de son implication dans l’analyse des données des membres du parti UKIP ». C’est l’une des principales conclusions de l’enquête menée par l’Information Commissionner Office (ICO – « Bureau du commissaire à l’information ») britannique, qui a publié mercredi 7 (...)

    #CambridgeAnalytica/Emerdata #algorithme #manipulation #données #élections #profiling (...)

    ##CambridgeAnalytica/Emerdata ##publicité

    • @koantig c’est plus facile de penser que c’est du vent (et ça rassure la population de croire que ça n’a pas eu d’influence sur le vote vu la monstruosité du scandale) que d’évaluer à sa mesure le système de surveillance mis en place pour profiler les électeurs et les influencer dans leur vote. Plusieurs films documentaires sur Cambridge Analytica présentent des enquêtes extrêmement bien menées pour se faire une idée plus précise de cette surveillance et du basculement mené tout en maintenant le mythe démocratique du vote, cela permet de comprendre l’avènement de figure tel que Trump. Enfin, pour mieux comprendre la réification en bulletin de vote des êtres humains dans la sphère politique, on peut se faire une idée des forces en œuvre avec les côtes prédictives de la bourse mondiale et les gains pharaoniques et cyniques du même auteur du programme.

    • Je n’ignore évidemment pas les problèmes que la généralisation de la surveillance engendrent (j’écris ce message sur tor ! Et il n’y a qu’à voir le genre de trucs que je poste) mais il faut s’attacher à mesurer les effets de ces outils à leur juste valeur.

      Pour Trump et le Brexit, elles ont sans doute jouer un rôle mais c’est parce que le vote était déjà à 50-50. Un effet même marginal peut décider de l’issue. Le fait que ces élections étaient si serrées au départ est un problème plus profond.

      Le FUD et le confusionisme m’ont l’air beaucoup plus efficaces pour saloper la démocratie que des machines fonctionnant sous deep learning, nourri par la surveillance (raison de plus de s’en passer !).

    • Le mot Brexit n’apparait que 2 fois dans le rapport en ligne, j’ai repris les passages qui me semblaient intéressants. Je ne développerai pas parce que je trouve épuisantes et stériles les conversations « pour avoir raison ».

      https://ico.org.uk/media/action-weve-taken/2618383/20201002_ico-o-ed-l-rtl-0181_to-julian-knight-mp.pdf

      This further work confirms my earlier conclusion that there are systemic vulnerabilities in our democratic systems.

      The investigation is therefore concluding, and the following letter and Annexes acts as our final written account to Parliament. It provides a summary of the conclusions we have drawn from our analysis of the evidence in the final stages of our investigation, the additional actions we have taken and why, and broader learning we and other data protection authorities can draw on to inform future investigations and regulatory work in the digital era. In addition, Annex 1 provides the Committee with detailed answers to the specific questions asked by the Committee. Annex 2 provides a deep dive into how SCL Elections / Cambridge Analytica used the personal data it held, whether these methods could be used in the future, and the associated risks to citizens.

      The following organisations have now paid the penalty notices levied on them:•Facebook (£500,000) paid 04 November 2019•Vote Leave (£40,000) paid 29 April 2019•Leave.EU (£15,000) paid 15 May 2019 •Emma’s Diary (£140,000) paid 29 August 201814.In addition, we successfully prosecuted SCL Elections for their failure to comply with my Enforcement Notice. We fined them £18,000

      22 - What is clear is that the use of digital campaign techniques are a permanent fixture of our elections and the wider democratic process and will only continue to grow in the future. The COVID-19 pandemic is only likely to accelerate this process as political parties and campaigns seek to engage with voters in a safe and socially distanced way.

      23 - I have always been clear that these are positive developments. New technologies enable political parties and others to engage with a broad range of communities and hard to reach groups in a way that cannot be done through traditional campaigning methods alone. But for this to be successful, citizens need to have trust in how their data is being used to engage with them.

      27.The impact of this investigation has also had international reach. I have been asked to brief parliaments and governments across the world and I have shared the learning from this investigation with election oversight and privacy regulators internationally. The prominence of the use of personal data in political influence has grown significantly, and several international counterparts have since undertaken similar work, as is appropriate to safeguard their national democratic structures.

      –----

      10.SCL’s own marketing material claimed they had “Over 5,000 data points per individual on 230 million adult Americans.” However, based on what we found it appears that this may have been an exaggeration. 11.Although we do not have a list of all the datasets, during the document review we discovered evidence that some of the data sets as at September 2015 included:•Nationwide voter files from L2 (meaning “Labels and Lists”) and DataTrust (~50 data points for 160M individuals)•Nationwide consumer data from Acxiom and Infogroup (~500 data points for 160M individuals) •Election return results from Magellan (~20data points for national census tracks) •Nationwide consumer data from DataTrust (3000 data points for 100M individuals) •Psychographic inventories (10 data points for 30M individuals) •Facebook social network (graph database containing 30M individuals) •Facebook likes (570 data points for 30M individuals) •In-depth Republican Primary focused surveys (80k) •ForAmerica member data (14.6M post comments, 240M post likes across 31 M users) •Emails from Infogroup (30M) •Emails from DataTrust (26M)12.In short, the number of data points varied considerably, both from individual to individual and from one project to the next.

      14.In respect of Dr Kogan’s application, which he called thisisyourdigitallife(the App), the material obtained in the evidence review corroborated our understanding as set out in our previous reports that it obtained data from individuals who authorised it to access their Facebook data. However, the App functioned in a way which meant that it was also able to obtain the data of that user’s Facebook ’friends’ (who had not themselves restricted such sharing through their own Facebook ’privacy controls’). In conjunction with the personality quiz function of the App, along with a record of each user’s ’likes’ information, Dr Kogan was able to model personality traits for users of the App, and for their Facebook ’friends’. This approach seeming built on
      14earlier work by Dr Kogan involving Facebook ‘likes’ and personality scores.Dr Kogan set up a new company, GSR, this was established and funded for the primary purpose of acting as a vehicle for the provision of the services anticipated under the contract between GSR and SCL / CA.

      19.It was suggested that some of the data was utilised for political campaigningassociated with the Brexit Referendum. However, our view on review of the evidence is that the data from GSR could not have been used in the Brexit Referendum as the data shared with SCL/Cambridge Analytica by Dr Kogan related to US registered voters. There was evidence of considerable focus in the data collection and data matching processes between GSR and SCL on US voters, as this was what was to be paid for under the contract(s) between them. Cambridge Analytica did appear to do a limited amount of
      15workfor Leave.EU but this involved the analysis of UKIP membership data rather than data obtained from Facebook or GSR. Some evidence was recovered however that suggested an intention by SCL / GSR to target UK voters in 2014 through the same process. This work does not appear however to have been taken forward.

      23.In early 2014, SCL/CA commissioned Aggregate IQ ("AIQ"), a Canadian based company, to build a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) tool for use during the American 2014 midterm elections. SCL called the tool RIPON. It was designed to help political campaigns with typical campaign activity such as door to door, telephone and email canvassing. In October 2014, AIQ also placed online advertisements (including on the Facebook Platform) for SCL on behalf of its clients.

      29.The data points collected by GSR with respect to survey users and their Facebook ‘friends’ was specifically selected to enable a ‘matching’ process against pre-existing SCL databases. Matching took place using file sharing platforms and by reference to name, date of birth and location –with SCL’s existing datafiles being ‘enriched’ and supplemented by GSR’s data about those same individuals –and this matched information being passed back into SCL systems. This resulted for example information including scores for voting frequency, whether likely republican or democrat, voting consistency, and a profile which predicted personality traits matched to information such as voter ID, name, address, age, and other commercial data.

      30.Through such processes the relevant US voter GSR data (about approx. 30 million individuals) was then further analysed using machine learning algorithms to create additional “predicted” scores relating to partisanship and other criteria which were then applied to all the individuals in the database. Some of these focussed on likes as wide ranging as “gay rights”, “Obama the worst president in US history”, “Re-elect President Obama in 2012”, “the Bible” and “National Rifle Association”. These scores were used to identify clusters of similar individuals who could be potentially targeted with advertising relating to political campaigns. This targeted advertising was ultimately likely the final purpose of the data gathering but whether or which specific data from GSR was then used in any specific part of campaign has not been possible todetermine from the digital evidence reviewed. There is however evidence recovered that suggests that similar approaches and models based on the predicted personality traits and other measures were used with Republican National Committee (RNC) data.