Quand la DGSI traque l’ultragauche dans la communauté scientifique française
►https://www.lepoint.fr/societe/quand-la-dgsi-traque-l-ultragauche-dans-la-communaute-scientifique-francaise
Sur la seule base de contacts avec l’ultragauche, qu’il nie, un ingénieur du Centre national d’études spatiales (Cnes) a été licencié. Il est question de la protection du potentiel scientifique et technique de la nation. Du risque d’affaiblir les moyens de défense de l’État ; de les détourner « à des fins de terrorisme, de prolifération d’armes, de destruction massive ou de contribution à l’accroissement d’arsenaux militaires ». C’est du moins ce qu’affirment notre Code pénal et notre Code de la sécurité (...)
]]>We’re Sensing Climate Change
Maybe we need more kinds of climate #data. Maybe we need data that connects climate change to people and places we care about.
What kind of data might we need to promote action on climate? What kinds of data are “actionable”?
These are the questions we, the Data Storytelling team of faculty and student interns at Penn, have been wrestling with while we, and probably you too, watch climate trends worsen. Earlier this month, in conjunction with the UN’s Climate Action Summit, the IPCC released its Special Report on the Oceans and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate. The environmental and climate data gathered in this report—like the data presented a year earlier, in the September 2018 Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5 Degrees—have been collected over decades. The data are robust; they show continuing terrible trends: more CO2 in the atmosphere and in the ocean. We’re cooking the planet, and we who listen to the overwhelming majority of scientists have known it for decades now.
We have the data, but we’re failing to act in ways large enough to slow, stem, and reverse the terrible trends.
When we hear the words “climate data,” we see biq quant, measurements collected by sophisticated sensing instruments and read and then interpreted by scientists in the field and lab. But maybe there are other measurements that can help spur action. Maybe we need more kinds of climate data. Maybe we need data that connects climate change to people and places we care about.
This month—inspired by #UniteBehindTheScience, by #FridaysForFuture, by the local organizers and attendees of climate strikes and marches, by the Climate Action Summit, and by the diverse youth activists who insist we must #ActOnClimate—we began a public data storytelling campaign. It challenges the idea that you need a lab coat to collect climate data. Your field site can be your own backyard. Individual, lived experiences of climate change provide valuable companions to the quantifiable science as we continue to struggle to comprehend and to take action on the climate crisis. We’re calling our campaign, #MyClimateStory, and we want to hear yours.
We introduced the #MyClimateStory initiative on campus at the University of Pennsylvania, as part of the 1.5* Minute Climate Mini-Lectures. Six data storytellers contributed their personal stories and we all talked about how “We’re Sensing Climate Change” in places we love. You can listen to those stories here. And we want you to hear your climate story too! You can contribute it—with text, audio, and video files, as you like, by clicking on the button below. It can be as short or long as you like! Every contribution feeds a growing data storybank, a living archive of climate data filled with local observations of everyday people talking about their favorite places and the changes they’re experiencing.
▻https://www.datarefugestories.org/blog/2019/9/23/were-sensing-climate-change
#storytelling #récit #narration #climat #changement_climatique #témoignage #données #données_sensibles
voir aussi le hashtag #myclimatestory sur twitter :
▻https://twitter.com/hashtag/myclimatestory?src=hashtag_click
Au congrès des gynécologues, une diapositive compare les femmes « à des juments »
►https://www.francetvinfo.fr/societe/droits-des-femmes/au-congres-des-gynecologues-une-diapositive-compare-les-femmes-a-des-ju
Des #données_sensibles compromises en #Suède, le gouvernement en difficulté
▻http://www.lemonde.fr/pixels/article/2017/07/25/des-donnees-sensibles-compromises-en-suede-le-gouvernement-en-difficulte_516
une importante masse de données appartenant à l’agence publique des transports suédoise, la #Transportstyrelsen, a été compromise. Concrètement, ces données ont été rendues accessibles à des personnes non habilitées à les consulter, notamment des employés de sous-traitants d’#IBM en Europe de l’Est.
]]>Gun Violence Researchers Race to Protect Data From Trump
Wintemute, epidemiologist and director of the Violence Prevention Research Program, was prepared. After seeing that climate scientists were systematically downloading crucial information from federal databases, he had drawn up a spreadsheet of the gun-related datasets he uses every day: lists of gun licensees, retailers, and manufacturers; gun tracing data; firearm-related death and injury numbers sorted by categories like race, location, or age. “I basically walked around the building saying, ‘Get it done now,’” Wintemute says. So on inauguration day, as Cerdá says, the #Violence_Prevention_Research_Program was less of a lab and more of a “little downloading bootcamp.”
▻https://www.wired.com/2017/02/gun-violence-researchers-race-protect-data-trump
#armes #armement #recherche #chercheurs #violence #Trump #données #données_sensibles
cc @reka @fil