• UK signs contract with US startup to identify migrants in small-boat crossings

    The UK government has turned a US-based startup specialized in artificial intelligence as part of its pledge to stop small-boat crossings. Experts have already pointed out the legal and logistical challenges of the plan.

    In a new effort to address the high number of Channel crossings, the UK Home Office is working with the US defense startup #Anduril, specialized in the use of artificial intelligence (AI).

    A surveillance tower has already been installed at Dover, and other technologies might be rolled out with the onset of warmer temperatures and renewed attempts by migrants to reach the UK. Some experts already point out the risks and practical loopholes involved in using AI to identify migrants.

    “This is obviously the next step of the illegal migration bill,” said Olivier Cahn, a researcher specialized in penal law.

    “The goal is to retrieve images that were taken at sea and use AI to show they entered UK territory illegally even if people vanish into thin air upon arrival in the UK.”

    The “illegal migration bill” was passed by the UK last month barring anyone from entering the country irregularly from filing an asylum claim and imposing a “legal duty” to remove them to a third country.
    Who is behind Anduril?

    Founded in 2017 by its CEO #Palmer_Luckey, Anduril is backed by #Peter_Thiel, a Silicon Valley investor and supporter of Donald Trump. The company has supplied autonomous surveillance technology to the US Department of Defense (DOD) to detect and track migrants trying to cross the US-Mexico border.

    In 2021, the UK Ministry of Defence awarded Anduril with a £3.8-million contract to trial an advanced base defence system. Anduril eventually opened a branch in London where it states its mission: “combining the latest in artificial intelligence with commercial-of-the-shelf sensor technology (EO, IR, Radar, Lidar, UGS, sUAS) to enhance national security through automated detection, identification and tracking of objects of interest.”

    According to Cahn, the advantage of Brexit is that the UK government is no longer required to submit to the General Data Protection Regulation (RGPDP), a component of data protection that also addresses the transfer of personal data outside the EU and EEA areas.

    “Even so, the UK has data protection laws of its own which the government cannot breach. Where will the servers with the incoming data be kept? What are the rights of appeal for UK citizens whose data is being processed by the servers?”, he asked.

    ’Smugglers will provide migrants with balaclavas for an extra 15 euros’

    Cahn also pointed out the technical difficulties of identifying migrants at sea. “The weather conditions are often not ideal, and many small-boat crossings happen at night. How will facial recognition technology operate in this context?”

    The ability of migrants and smugglers to adapt is yet another factor. “People are going to cover their faces, and anyone would think the smugglers will respond by providing migrants with balaclavas for an extra 15 euros.”

    If the UK has solicited the services of a US startup to detect and identify migrants, the reason may lie in AI’s principle of self-learning. “A machine accumulates data and recognizes what it has already seen. The US is a country with a significantly more racially and ethnically diverse population than the UK. Its artificial intelligence might contain data from populations which are more ethnically comparable to the populations that are crossing the Channel, like Somalia for example, thus facilitating the process of facial recognition.”

    For Cahn, it is not capturing the images which will be the most difficult but the legal challenges that will arise out of their usage. “People are going to be identified and there are going to be errors. If a file exists, there needs to be the possibility for individuals to appear before justice and have access to a judge.”

    A societal uproar

    In a research paper titled “Refugee protection in the artificial intelligence Era”, Chatham House notes “the most common ethical and legal challenges associated with the use of AI in asylum and related border and immigration systems involve issues of opacity and unpredictability, the potential for bias and unlawful discrimination, and how such factors affect the ability of individuals to obtain a remedy in the event of erroneous or unfair decisions.”

    For Cahn, the UK government’s usage of AI can only be used to justify and reinforce its hardline position against migrants. “For a government that doesn’t respect the Geneva Convention [whose core principle is non-refoulement, editor’s note] and which passed an illegal migration law, it is out of the question that migrants have entered the territory legally.”

    Identifying migrants crossing the Channel is not going to be the hardest part for the UK government. Cahn imagines a societal backlash with, “the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom being solicited, refugees seeking remedies to legal decisions through lawyers and associations attacking”.

    He added there would be due process concerning the storage of the data, with judges issuing disclosure orders. “There is going to be a whole series of questions which the government will have to elucidate. The rights of refugees are often used as a laboratory. If these technologies are ’successful’, they will soon be applied to the rest of the population."

    https://www.infomigrants.net/en/post/48326/uk-signs-contract-with-us-startup-to-identify-migrants-in-smallboat-cr

    #UK #Angleterre #migrations #asile #réfugiés #militarisation_des_frontières #frontières #start-up #complexe_militaro-industriel #IA #intelligence_artificielle #surveillance #technologie #channel #Manche

    –—

    ajouté à la métaliste sur la Bibby Stockholm:
    https://seenthis.net/messages/1016683

    • Huge barge set to house 500 asylum seekers arrives in the UK

      The #Bibby_Stockholm is being refitted in #Falmouth to increase its capacity from 222 to 506 people.

      A barge set to house 500 asylum seekers has arrived in the UK as the government struggles with efforts to move migrants out of hotels.

      The Independent understands that people will not be transferred onto the Bibby Stockholm until July, following refurbishment to increase its capacity and safety checks.

      The barge has been towed from its former berth in Italy to the port of Falmouth, in Cornwall.

      It will remain there while works are carried out, before being moved onto its final destination in #Portland, Dorset.

      The private operators of the port struck an agreement to host the barge with the Home Office without formal public consultation, angering the local council and residents.

      Conservative MP Richard Drax previously told The Independent legal action was still being considered to stop the government’s plans for what he labelled a “quasi-prison”.

      He accused ministers and Home Office officials of being “unable to answer” practical questions on how the barge will operate, such as how asylum seekers will be able to come and go safely through the port, what activities they will be provided with and how sufficient healthcare will be ensured.

      “The question is how do we cope?” Mr Drax said. “Every organisation has its own raft of questions: ‘Where’s the money coming from? Who’s going to do what if this all happens?’ There are not sufficient answers, which is very worrying.”

      The Independent previously revealed that asylum seekers will have less living space than an average parking bay on the Bibby Stockholm, which saw at least one person die and reports of rape and abuse on board when it was used by the Dutch government to detain migrants in the 2000s.

      An official brochure released by owner Bibby Marine shows there are only 222 “single en-suite bedrooms” on board, meaning that at least two people must be crammed into every cabin for the government to achieve its aim of holding 500 people.

      Dorset Council has said it still had “serious reservations about the appropriateness of Portland Port in this scenario and remains opposed to the proposals”.

      The Conservative police and crime commissioner for Dorset is demanding extra government funding for the local force to “meet the extra policing needs that this project will entail”.

      A multi-agency forum including representatives from national, regional and local public sector agencies has been looking at plans for the provision of health services, the safety and security of both asylum seekers and local residents and charity involvement.

      Portland Port said it had been working with the Home Office and local agencies to ensure the safe arrival and operation of the Bibby Stockholm, and to minimise its impact locally.

      The barge is part of a wider government push to move migrants out of hotels, which are currently housing more than 47,000 asylum seekers at a cost of £6m a day.

      But the use of ships as accommodation was previously ruled out on cost grounds by the Treasury, when Rishi Sunak was chancellor, and the government has not confirmed how much it will be spending on the scheme.

      Ministers have also identified several former military and government sites, including two defunct airbases and an empty prison, that they want to transform into asylum accommodation.

      But a court battle with Braintree District Council over former RAF Wethersfield is ongoing, and legal action has also been threatened over similar plans for RAF Scampton in Lancashire.

      Last month, a barrister representing home secretary Suella Braverman told the High Court that 56,000 people were expected to arrive on small boats in 2023 and that some could be made homeless if hotel places are not found.

      A record backlog of asylum applications, driven by the increase in Channel crossings and a collapse in Home Office decision-making, mean the government is having to provide accommodation for longer while claims are considered.

      https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/barge-falmouth-cornwall-migrants-bibby-b2333313.html
      #barge #bateau

    • ‘Performative cruelty’ : the hostile architecture of the UK government’s migrant barge

      The arrival of the Bibby Stockholm barge at Portland Port, in Dorset, on July 18 2023, marks a new low in the UK government’s hostile immigration environment. The vessel is set to accommodate over 500 asylum seekers. This, the Home Office argues, will benefit British taxpayers and local residents.

      The barge, however, was immediately rejected by the local population and Dorset council. Several British charities and church groups have condemned the barge, and the illegal migration bill it accompanies, as “an affront to human dignity”.

      Anti-immigration groups have also protested against the barge, with some adopting offensive language, referring to the asylum seekers who will be hosted there as “bargies”. Conservative MP for South Dorset Richard Drax has claimed that hosting migrants at sea would exacerbate tenfold the issues that have arisen in hotels to date, namely sexual assaults, children disappearing and local residents protesting.

      My research shows that facilities built to house irregular migrants in Europe and beyond create a temporary infrastructure designed to be hostile. Governments thereby effectively make asylum seekers more displaceable while ignoring their everyday spatial and social needs.
      Precarious space

      The official brochure plans for the Bibby Stockholm show 222 single bedrooms over three stories, built around two small internal courtyards. It has now been retrofitted with bunk beds to host more than 500 single men – more than double the number it was designed to host.

      Journalists Lizzie Dearden and Martha McHardy have shown this means the asylum seekers housed there – for up to nine months – will have “less living space than an average parking bay”. This stands in contravention of international standards of a minimum 4.5m² of covered living space per person in cold climates, where more time is spent indoors.

      In an open letter, dated June 15 2023 and addressed to home secretary Suella Braverman, over 700 people and nearly 100 non-governmental organisations (NGOs) voiced concerns that this will only add to the trauma migrants have already experienced:

      Housing people on a sea barge – which we argue is equal to a floating prison – is morally indefensible, and threatens to retraumatise a group of already vulnerable people.

      Locals are concerned already overstretched services in Portland, including GP practices, will not be able to cope with further pressure. West Dorset MP Chris Lode has questioned whether the barge itself is safe “to cope with double the weight that it was designed to bear”. A caller to the LBC radio station, meanwhile, has voiced concerns over the vessel’s very narrow and low fire escape routes, saying: “What they [the government] are effectively doing here is creating a potential Grenfell on water, a floating coffin.”

      Such fears are not unfounded. There have been several cases of fires destroying migrant camps in Europe, from the Grand-Synthe camp near Dunkirk in France, in 2017, to the 2020 fire at the Moria camp in Greece. The difficulty of escaping a vessel at sea could turn it into a death trap.

      Performative hostility

      Research on migrant accommodation shows that being able to inhabit a place – even temporarily – and develop feelings of attachment and belonging, is crucial to a person’s wellbeing. Even amid ever tighter border controls, migrants in Europe, who can be described as “stuck on the move”, nonetheless still attempt to inhabit their temporary spaces and form such connections.

      However, designs can hamper such efforts when they concentrate asylum seekers in inhospitable, cut-off spaces. In 2015, Berlin officials began temporarily housing refugees in the former Tempelhof airport, a noisy, alienating industrial space, lacking in privacy and disconnected from the city. Many people ended up staying there for the better part of a year.

      French authorities, meanwhile, opened the Centre Humanitaire Paris-Nord in Paris in 2016, temporary migrant housing in a disused train depot. Nicknamed la Bulle (the bubble) for its bulbous inflatable covering, this facility was noisy and claustrophobic, lacking in basic comforts.

      Like the barge in Portland Port, these facilities, placed in industrial sites, sit uncomfortably between hospitality and hostility. The barge will be fenced off, since the port is a secured zone, and access will be heavily restricted and controlled. The Home Office insists that the barge is not a floating prison, yet it is an unmistakably hostile space.

      Infrastructure for water and electricity will physically link the barge to shore. However, Dorset council has no jurisdiction at sea.

      The commercial agreement on the barge was signed between the Home Office and Portland Port, not the council. Since the vessel is positioned below the mean low water mark, it did not require planning permission.

      This makes the barge an island of sorts, where other rules apply, much like those islands in the Aegean sea and in the Pacific, on which Greece and Australia have respectively housed migrants.

      I have shown how facilities are often designed in this way not to give displaced people any agency, but, on the contrary, to objectify them. They heighten the instability migrants face, keeping them detached from local communities and constantly on the move.

      The government has presented the barge as a cheaper solution than the £6.8 million it is currently spending, daily, on housing asylum seekers in hotels. A recent report by two NGOs, Reclaim the Seas and One Life to Live, concludes, however, that it will save less than £10 a person a day. It could even prove more expensive than the hotel model.

      Sarah Teather, director of the Jesuit Refugee Service UK charity, has described the illegal migration bill as “performative cruelty”. Images of the barge which have flooded the news certainly meet that description too.

      However threatening these images might be, though, they will not stop desperate people from attempting to come to the UK to seek safety. Rather than deterring asylum seekers, the Bibby Stockholm is potentially creating another hazard to them and to their hosting communities.

      https://theconversation.com/performative-cruelty-the-hostile-architecture-of-the-uk-governments

      –---

      Point intéressant, lié à l’aménagement du territoire :

      “Since the vessel is positioned below the mean low water mark, it did not require planning permission”

      C’est un peu comme les #zones_frontalières qui ont été créées un peu partout en Europe (et pas que) pour que les Etats se débarassent des règles en vigueur (notamment le principe du non-refoulement). Voir cette métaliste, à laquelle j’ajoute aussi cet exemple :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/795053

      voir aussi :

      The circumstances at Portland Port are very different because where the barge is to be positioned is below the mean low water mark. This means that the barge is outside of our planning control and there is no requirement for planning permission from the council.

      https://news.dorsetcouncil.gov.uk/2023/07/18/leaders-comments-on-the-home-office-barge

      #hostile_architecture #architecture_hostile #dignité #espace #Portland #hostilité #hostilité_performative #île #infrastructure #extraterritorialité #extra-territorialité #prix #coût

    • Sur l’#histoire (notamment liées au commerce d’ #esclaves) de la Bibby Stockholm :

      Bibby Line, shipowners

      Information
      From Guide to the Records of Merseyside Maritime Museum, volume 1: Bibby Line. In 1807 John Bibby and John Highfield, Liverpool shipbrokers, began taking shares in ships, mainly Parkgate Dublin packets. By 1821 (the end of the partnership) they had vessels sailing to the Mediterranean and South America. In 1850 they expanded their Mediterranean and Black Sea interests by buying two steamers and by 1865 their fleet had increased to twenty three. The opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 severely affected their business and Frederick Leyland, their general manager, failed to persuade the family partners to diversify onto the Atlantic. Eventually, he bought them out in 1873. In 1889 the Bibby family revived its shipowning interests with a successful passenger cargo service to Burma. From 1893 it also began to carry British troops to overseas postings which remained a Bibby staple until 1962. The Burma service ended in 1971 and the company moved to new areas of shipowning including bulkers, gas tankers and accommodation barges. It still has its head office in Liverpool where most management records are held. The museum holds models of the Staffordshire (1929) and Oxfordshire (1955). For further details see the attached catalogue or contact The Archives Centre for a copy of the catalogue.

      The earliest records within the collection, the ships’ logs at B/BIBBY/1/1/1 - 1/1/3 show company vessels travelling between Europe and South America carrying cargoes that would have been produced on plantations using the labour of enslaved peoples or used within plantation and slave based economies. For example the vessel Thomas (B/BIBBY/1/1/1) carries a cargo of iron hoops for barrels to Brazil in 1812. The Mary Bibby on a voyage in 1825-1826 loads a cargo of sugar in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil to carry to Rotterdam. The log (B/BIBBY/1/1/3) records the use of ’negroes’ to work with the ship’s carpenter while the vessel is in port.

      In September 1980 the latest Bibby vessel to hold the name Derbyshire was lost with all hands in the South China Sea. This collection does not include records relating to that vessel or its sinking, apart from a copy ’Motor vessel ’Derbyshire’, 1976-80: in memoriam’ at reference B/BIBBY/3/2/1 (a copy is also available in The Archives Centre library collection at 340.DER). Information about the sinking and subsequent campaigning by the victims’ family can be found on the NML website and in the Life On Board gallery. The Archives Centre holds papers of Captain David Ramwell who assisted the Derbyshire Family Association at D/RAM and other smaller collections of related documents within the DX collection.

      https://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/artifact/bibby-line-shipowners

      –—
      An Open Letter to #Bibby_Marine

      Links between your parent company #Bibby_Line_Group (#BLG) and the slave trade have repeatedly been made. If true, we appeal to you to consider what actions you might take in recompense.

      Bibby Marine’s modern slavery statement says that one of the company’s values is to “do the right thing”, and that you “strongly support the eradication of slavery, as well as the eradication of servitude, forced or compulsory labour and human trafficking”. These are admirable words.

      Meanwhile, your parent company’s website says that it is “family owned with a rich history”. Please will you clarify whether this rich history includes slaving voyages where ships were owned, and cargoes transported, by BLG’s founder John Bibby, six generations ago. The BLG website says that in 1807 (which is when slavery was abolished in Britain), “John Bibby began trading as a shipowner in Liverpool with his partner John Highfield”. John Bibby is listed as co-owner of three slaving ships, of which John Highfield co-owned two:

      In 1805, the Harmonie (co-owned by #John_Bibby and three others, including John Highfield) left Liverpool for a voyage which carried 250 captives purchased in West Central Africa and St Helena, delivering them to Cumingsberg in 1806 (see the SlaveVoyages database using Voyage ID 81732).
      In 1806, the Sally (co-owned by John Bibby and two others) left Liverpool for a voyage which transported 250 captives purchased in Bassa and delivered them to Barbados (see the SlaveVoyages database using Voyage ID 83481).
      In 1806, the Eagle (co-owned by John Bibby and four others, including John Highfield) left Liverpool for a voyage which transported 237 captives purchased in Cameroon and delivered them to Kingston in 1807 (see the SlaveVoyages database using Voyage ID 81106).

      The same and related claims were recently mentioned by Private Eye. They also appear in the story of Liverpool’s Calderstones Park [PDF] and on the website of National Museums Liverpool and in this blog post “Shenanigans in Shipping” (a detailed history of the BLG). They are also mentioned by Laurence Westgaph, a TV presenter specialising in Black British history and slavery and the author of Read The Signs: Street Names with a Connection to the Transatlantic Slave Trade and Abolition in Liverpool [PDF], published with the support of English Heritage, The City of Liverpool, Northwest Regional Development Agency, National Museums Liverpool and Liverpool Vision.

      While of course your public pledges on slavery underline that there is no possibility of there being any link between the activities of John Bibby and John Highfield in the early 1800s and your activities in 2023, we do believe that it is in the public interest to raise this connection, and to ask for a public expression of your categorical renunciation of the reported slave trade activities of Mr Bibby and Mr Highfield.

      https://www.refugeecouncil.org.uk/latest/news/an-open-letter-to-bibby-marine

      –-

      Très peu d’info sur John Bibby sur wikipedia :

      John Bibby (19 February 1775 – 17 July 1840) was the founder of the British Bibby Line shipping company. He was born in Eccleston, near Ormskirk, Lancashire. He was murdered on 17 July 1840 on his way home from dinner at a friend’s house in Kirkdale.[1]


      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Bibby_(businessman)

    • ‘Floating Prisons’: The 200-year-old family #business behind the Bibby Stockholm

      #Bibby_Line_Group_Limited is a UK company offering financial, marine and construction services to clients in at least 16 countries around the world. It recently made headlines after the government announced one of the firm’s vessels, Bibby Stockholm, would be used to accommodate asylum seekers on the Dorset coast.

      In tandem with plans to house migrants at surplus military sites, the move was heralded by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Home Secretary Suella Braverman as a way of mitigating the £6m-a-day cost of hotel accommodation amid the massive ongoing backlog of asylum claims, as well as deterring refugees from making the dangerous channel crossing to the UK. Several protests have been organised against the project already, while over ninety migrants’ rights groups and hundreds of individual campaigners have signed an open letter to the Home Secretary calling for the plans to be scrapped, describing the barge as a “floating prison.”

      Corporate Watch has researched into the Bibby Line Group’s operations and financial interests. We found that:

      - The Bibby Stockholm vessel was previously used as a floating detention centre in the Netherlands, where undercover reporting revealed violence, sexual exploitation and poor sanitation.

      – Bibby Line Group is more than 90% owned by members of the Bibby family, primarily through trusts. Its pre-tax profits for 2021 stood at almost £31m, which they upped to £35.5m by claiming generous tax credits and deferring a fair amount to the following year.

      - Management aboard the vessel will be overseen by an Australian business travel services company, Corporate Travel Management, who have previously had aspersions cast over the financial health of their operations and the integrity of their business practices.

      - Another beneficiary of the initiative is Langham Industries, a maritime and engineering company whose owners, the Langham family, have longstanding ties to right wing parties.

      Key Issues

      According to the Home Office, the Bibby Stockholm barge will be operational for at least 18 months, housing approximately 500 single adult men while their claims are processed, with “24/7 security in place on board, to minimise the disruption to local communities.” These measures appear to have been to dissuade opposition from the local Conservative council, who pushed for background checks on detainees and were reportedly even weighing legal action out of concern for a perceived threat of physical attacks from those housed onboard, as well as potential attacks from the far right against migrants held there.

      Local campaigners have taken aim at the initiative, noting in the open letter:

      “For many people seeking asylum arriving in the UK, the sea represents a site of significant trauma as they have been forced to cross it on one or more occasions. Housing people on a sea barge – which we argue is equal to a floating prison – is morally indefensible, and threatens to re-traumatise a group of already vulnerable people.”

      Technically, migrants on the barge will be able to leave the site. However, in reality they will be under significant levels of surveillance and cordoned off behind fences in the high security port area.

      If they leave, there is an expectation they will return by 11pm, and departure will be controlled by the authorities. According to the Home Office:

      “In order to ensure that migrants come and go in an orderly manner with as little impact as possible, buses will be provided to take those accommodated on the vessel from the port to local drop off points”.

      These drop off points are to be determined by the government, while being sited off the coast of Dorset means they will be isolated from centres of support and solidarity.

      Meanwhile, the government’s new Illegal Migration Bill is designed to provide a legal justification for the automatic detention of refugees crossing the Channel. If it passes, there’s a chance this might set the stage for a change in regime on the Bibby Stockholm – from that of an “accommodation centre” to a full-blown migrant prison.

      An initial release from the Home Office suggested the local voluntary sector would be engaged “to organise activities that keep occupied those being accommodated, potentially involved in local volunteering activity,” though they seemed to have changed the wording after critics said this would mean detainees could be effectively exploited for unpaid labour. It’s also been reported the vessel required modifications in order to increase capacity to the needed level, raising further concerns over cramped living conditions and a lack of privacy.

      Bibby Line Group has prior form in border profiteering. From 1994 to 1998, the Bibby Stockholm was used to house the homeless, some of whom were asylum seekers, in Hamburg, Germany. In 2005, it was used to detain asylum seekers in the Netherlands, which proved a cause of controversy at the time. Undercover reporting revealed a number of cases abuse on board, such as beatings and sexual exploitation, as well suicide attempts, routine strip searches, scabies and the death of an Algerian man who failed to receive timely medical care for a deteriorating heart condition. As the undercover security guard wrote:

      “The longer I work on the Bibby Stockholm, the more I worry about safety on the boat. Between exclusion and containment I encounter so many defects and feel so much tension among the prisoners that it no longer seems to be a question of whether things will get completely out of hand here, but when.”

      He went on:

      “I couldn’t stand the way prisoners were treated […] The staff become like that, because the whole culture there is like that. Inhuman. They do not see the residents as people with a history, but as numbers.”

      Discussions were also held in August 2017 over the possibility of using the vessel as accommodation for some 400 students in Galway, Ireland, amid the country’s housing crisis. Though the idea was eventually dropped for lack of mooring space and planning permission requirements, local students had voiced safety concerns over the “bizarre” and “unconventional” solution to a lack of rental opportunities.
      Corporate Travel Management & Langham Industries

      Although leased from Bibby Line Group, management aboard the Bibby Stockholm itself will be handled by #Corporate_Travel_Management (#CTM), a global travel company specialising in business travel services. The Australian-headquartered company also recently received a £100m contract for the provision of accommodation, travel, venue and ancillary booking services for the housing of Ukrainian refugees at local hotels and aboard cruise ships M/S Victoria and M/S Ambition. The British Red Cross warned earlier in May against continuing to house refugees on ships with “isolated” and “windowless” cabins, and said the scheme had left many “living in limbo.”

      Founded by CEO #Jamie_Pherous, CTM was targeted in 2018 by #VGI_Partners, a group of short-sellers, who identified more than 20 red flags concerning the company’s business interests. Most strikingly, the short-sellers said they’d attended CTM’s offices in Glasgow, Paris, Amsterdam, Stockholm and Switzerland. Finding no signs of business activity there, they said it was possible the firm had significantly overstated the scale of its operations. VGI Partners also claimed CTM’s cash flows didn’t seem to add up when set against the company’s reported growth, and that CTM hadn’t fully disclosed revisions they’d made to their annual revenue figures.

      Two years later, the short-sellers released a follow-up report, questioning how CTM had managed to report a drop in rewards granted for high sales numbers to travel agencies, when in fact their transaction turnover had grown during the same period. They also accused CTM of dressing up their debt balance to make their accounts look healthier.

      CTM denied VGI Partners’ allegations. In their response, they paraphrased a report by auditors EY, supposedly confirming there were no question marks over their business practices, though the report itself was never actually made public. They further claim VGI Partners, as short-sellers, had only released the reports in the hope of benefitting from uncertainty over CTM’s operations.

      Despite these troubles, CTM’s market standing improved drastically earlier this year, when it was announced the firm had secured contracts for the provision of travel services to the UK Home Office worth in excess of $3bn AUD (£1.6bn). These have been accompanied by further tenders with, among others, the National Audit Office, HS2, Cafcass, Serious Fraud Office, Office of National Statistics, HM Revenue & Customs, National Health Service, Ministry of Justice, Department of Education, Foreign Office, and the Equality and Human Rights Commission.

      The Home Office has not released any figures on the cost of either leasing or management services aboard Bibby Stockholm, though press reports have put the estimated price tag at more than £20,000 a day for charter and berthing alone. If accurate, this would put the overall expenditure for the 18-month period in which the vessel will operate as a detention centre at almost £11m, exclusive of actual detention centre management costs such as security, food and healthcare.

      Another beneficiary of the project are Portland Port’s owners, #Langham_Industries, a maritime and engineering company owned by the #Langham family. The family has long-running ties to right-wing parties. Langham Industries donated over £70,000 to the UK Independence Party from 2003 up until the 2016 Brexit referendum. In 2014, Langham Industries donated money to support the re-election campaign of former Clacton MP for UKIP Douglas Carswell, shortly after his defection from the Conservatives. #Catherine_Langham, a Tory parish councillor for Hilton in Dorset, has described herself as a Langham Industries director (although she is not listed on Companies House). In 2016 she was actively involved in local efforts to support the campaign to leave the European Union. The family holds a large estate in Dorset which it uses for its other line of business, winemaking.

      At present, there is no publicly available information on who will be providing security services aboard the Bibby Stockholm.

      Business Basics

      Bibby Line Group describes itself as “one of the UK’s oldest family owned businesses,” operating in “multiple countries, employing around 1,300 colleagues, and managing over £1 billion of funds.” Its head office is registered in Liverpool, with other headquarters in Scotland, Hong Kong, India, Singapore, Malaysia, France, Slovakia, Czechia, the Netherlands, Germany, Poland and Nigeria (see the appendix for more). The company’s primary sectors correspond to its three main UK subsidiaries:

      #Bibby_Financial_Services. A global provider of financial services. The firm provides loans to small- and medium-sized businesses engaged in business services, construction, manufacturing, transportation, export, recruitment and wholesale markets. This includes invoice financing, export and trade finance, and foreign exchanges. Overall, the subsidiary manages more than £6bn each year on behalf of some 9,000 clients across 300 different industry sectors, and in 2021 it brought in more than 50% of the group’s annual turnover.

      - #Bibby_Marine_Limited. Owner and operator of the Bibby WaveMaster fleet, a group of vessels specialising in the transport and accommodation of workers employed at remote locations, such as offshore oil and gas sites in the North Sea. Sometimes, as in the case of Chevron’s Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) project in Nigeria, the vessels are used as an alternative to hotels owing to a “a volatile project environment.” The fleet consists of 40 accommodation vessels similar in size to the Bibby Stockholm and a smaller number of service vessels, though the share of annual turnover pales compared to the group’s financial services operations, standing at just under 10% for 2021.

      - #Garic Ltd. Confined to construction, quarrying, airport, agriculture and transport sectors in the UK, the firm designs, manufactures and purchases plant equipment and machinery for sale or hire. Garic brought in around 14% of Bibby Line Group’s turnover in 2021.

      Prior to February 2021, Bibby Line Group also owned #Costcutter_Supermarkets_Group, before it was sold to #Bestway_Wholesale to maintain liquidity amid the Covid-19 pandemic. In their report for that year, the company’s directors also suggested grant funding from #MarRI-UK, an organisation facilitating innovation in maritime technologies and systems, had been important in preserving the firm’s position during the crisis.
      History

      The Bibby Line Group’s story begins in 1807, when Lancashire-born shipowner John Bibby began trading out of Liverpool with partner John Highfield. By the time of his death in 1840, murdered while returning home from dinner with a friend in Kirkdale, Bibby had struck out on his own and come to manage a fleet of more than 18 ships. The mysterious case of his death has never been solved, and the business was left to his sons John and James.

      Between 1891 and 1989, the company operated under the name #Bibby_Line_Limited. Its ships served as hospital and transport vessels during the First World War, as well as merchant cruisers, and the company’s entire fleet of 11 ships was requisitioned by the state in 1939.

      By 1970, the company had tripled its overseas earnings, branching into ‘factoring’, or invoice financing (converting unpaid invoices into cash for immediate use via short-term loans) in the early 1980s, before this aspect of the business was eventually spun off into Bibby Financial Services. The group acquired Garic Ltd in 2008, which currently operates four sites across the UK.

      People

      #Jonathan_Lewis has served as Bibby Line Group’s Managing and Executive Director since January 2021, prior to which he acted as the company’s Chief Financial and Strategy Officer since joining in 2019. Previously, Lewis worked as CFO for Imagination Technologies, a tech company specialising in semiconductors, and as head of supermarket Tesco’s mergers and acquisitions team. He was also a member of McKinsey’s European corporate finance practice, as well as an investment banker at Lazard. During his first year at the helm of Bibby’s operations, he was paid £748,000. Assuming his role at the head of the group’s operations, he replaced Paul Drescher, CBE, then a board member of the UK International Chamber of Commerce and a former president of the Confederation of British Industry.

      Bibby Line Group’s board also includes two immediate members of the Bibby family, Sir #Michael_James_Bibby, 3rd Bt. and his younger brother #Geoffrey_Bibby. Michael has acted as company chairman since 2020, before which he had occupied senior management roles in the company for 20 years. He also has external experience, including time at Unilever’s acquisitions, disposals and joint venture divisions, and now acts as president of the UK Chamber of Shipping, chairman of the Charities Trust, and chairman of the Institute of Family Business Research Foundation.

      Geoffrey has served as a non-executive director of the company since 2015, having previously worked as a managing director of Vast Visibility Ltd, a digital marketing and technology company. In 2021, the Bibby brothers received salaries of £125,000 and £56,000 respectively.

      The final member of the firm’s board is #David_Anderson, who has acted as non-executive director since 2012. A financier with 35 years experience in investment banking, he’s founder and CEO of EPL Advisory – which advises company boards on requirements and disclosure obligations of public markets – and chair of Creative Education Trust, a multi-academy trust comprising 17 schools. Anderson is also chairman at multinational ship broker Howe Robinson Partners, which recently auctioned off a superyacht seized from Dmitry Pumpyansky, after the sanctioned Russian businessman reneged on a €20.5m loan from JP Morgan. In 2021, Anderson’s salary stood at £55,000.

      Ownership

      Bibby Line Group’s annual report and accounts for 2021 state that more than 90% of the company is owned by members of the Bibby family, primarily through family trusts. These ownership structures, effectively entities allowing people to benefit from assets without being their registered legal owners, have long attracted staunch criticism from transparency advocates given the obscurity they afford means they often feature extensively in corruption, money laundering and tax abuse schemes.

      According to Companies House, the UK corporate registry, between 50% and 75% of Bibby Line Group’s shares and voting rights are owned by #Bibby_Family_Company_Limited, which also retains the right to appoint and remove members of the board. Directors of Bibby Family Company Limited include both the Bibby brothers, as well as a third sibling, #Peter_John_Bibby, who’s formally listed as the firm’s ‘ultimate beneficial owner’ (i.e. the person who ultimately profits from the company’s assets).

      Other people with comparable shares in Bibby Family Company Limited are #Mark_Rupert_Feeny, #Philip_Charles_Okell, and Lady #Christine_Maud_Bibby. Feeny’s occupation is listed as solicitor, with other interests in real estate management and a position on the board of the University of Liverpool Pension Fund Trustees Limited. Okell meanwhile appears as director of Okell Money Management Limited, a wealth management firm, while Lady Bibby, Michael and Geoffrey’s mother, appears as “retired playground supervisor.”

      Key Relationships

      Bibby Line Group runs an internal ‘Donate a Day’ volunteer program, enabling employees to take paid leave in order to “help causes they care about.” Specific charities colleagues have volunteered with, listed in the company’s Annual Review for 2021 to 2022, include:

      - The Hive Youth Zone. An award-winning charity for young people with disabilities, based in the Wirral.

      – The Whitechapel Centre. A leading homeless and housing charity in the Liverpool region, working with people sleeping rough, living in hostels, or struggling with their accommodation.

      - Let’s Play Project. Another charity specialising in after-school and holiday activities for young people with additional needs in the Banbury area.

      - Whitdale House. A care home for the elderly, based in Whitburn, West Lothian and run by the local council.

      – DEBRA. An Irish charity set up in 1988 for individuals living with a rare, painful skin condition called epidermolysis bullosa, as well as their families.

      – Reaching Out Homeless Outreach. A non-profit providing resources and support to the homeless in Ireland.

      Various senior executives and associated actors at Bibby Line Group and its subsidiaries also have current and former ties to the following organisations:

      - UK Chamber of Shipping

      - Charities Trust

      - Institute of Family Business Research Foundation

      - Indefatigable Old Boys Association

      - Howe Robinson Partners

      - hibu Ltd

      - EPL Advisory

      - Creative Education Trust

      - Capita Health and Wellbeing Limited

      - The Ambassador Theatre Group Limited

      – Pilkington Plc

      – UK International Chamber of Commerce

      – Confederation of British Industry

      – Arkley Finance Limited (Weatherby’s Banking Group)

      – FastMarkets Ltd, Multiple Sclerosis Society

      – Early Music as Education

      – Liverpool Pension Fund Trustees Limited

      – Okell Money Management Limited

      Finances

      For the period ending 2021, Bibby Line Group’s total turnover stood at just under £260m, with a pre-tax profit of almost £31m – fairly healthy for a company providing maritime services during a global pandemic. Their post-tax profits in fact stood at £35.5m, an increase they would appear to have secured by claiming generous tax credits (£4.6m) and deferring a fair amount (£8.4m) to the following year.

      Judging by their last available statement on the firm’s profitability, Bibby’s directors seem fairly confident the company has adequate financing and resources to continue operations for the foreseeable future. They stress their February 2021 sale of Costcutter was an important step in securing this, given it provided additional liquidity during the pandemic, as well as the funding secured for R&D on fuel consumption by Bibby Marine’s fleet.
      Scandal Sheet

      Bibby Line Group and its subsidiaries have featured in a number of UK legal proceedings over the years, sometimes as defendants. One notable case is Godfrey v Bibby Line, a lawsuit brought against the company in 2019 after one of their former employees died as the result of an asbestos-related disease.

      In their claim, the executors of Alan Peter Godfrey’s estate maintained that between 1965 and 1972, he was repeatedly exposed to large amounts of asbestos while working on board various Bibby vessels. Although the link between the material and fatal lung conditions was established as early as 1930, they claimed that Bibby Line, among other things:

      “Failed to warn the deceased of the risk of contracting asbestos related disease or of the precautions to be taken in relation thereto;

      “Failed to heed or act upon the expert evidence available to them as to the best means of protecting their workers from danger from asbestos dust; [and]

      “Failed to take all reasonably practicable measures, either by securing adequate ventilation or by the provision and use of suitable respirators or otherwise, to prevent inhalation of dust.”

      The lawsuit, which claimed “unlimited damage”’ against the group, also stated that Mr Godfrey’s “condition deteriorated rapidly with worsening pain and debility,” and that he was “completely dependent upon others for his needs by the last weeks of his life.” There is no publicly available information on how the matter was concluded.

      In 2017, Bibby Line Limited also featured in a leak of more than 13.4 million financial records known as the Paradise Papers, specifically as a client of Appleby, which provided “offshore corporate services” such as legal and accountancy work. According to the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, a global network of investigative media outlets, leaked Appleby documents revealed, among other things, “the ties between Russia and [Trump’s] billionaire commerce secretary, the secret dealings of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s chief fundraiser and the offshore interests of the Queen of England and more than 120 politicians around the world.”

      This would not appear to be the Bibby group’s only link to the shady world of offshore finance. Michael Bibby pops up as a treasurer for two shell companies registered in Panama, Minimar Transport S.A. and Vista Equities Inc.
      Looking Forward

      Much about the Bibby Stockholm saga remains to be seen. The exact cost of the initiative and who will be providing security services on board, are open questions. What’s clear however is that activists will continue to oppose the plans, with efforts to prevent the vessel sailing from Falmouth to its final docking in Portland scheduled to take place on 30th June.

      Appendix: Company Addresses

      HQ and general inquiries: 3rd Floor Walker House, Exchange Flags, Liverpool, United Kingdom, L2 3YL

      Tel: +44 (0) 151 708 8000

      Other offices, as of 2021:

      6, Shenton Way, #18-08A Oue Downtown 068809, Singapore

      1/1, The Exchange Building, 142 St. Vincent Street, Glasgow, G2 5LA, United Kingdom

      4th Floor Heather House, Heather Road, Sandyford, Dublin 18, Ireland

      Unit 2302, 23/F Jubilee Centre, 18 Fenwick Street, Wanchai, Hong Kong

      Unit 508, Fifth Floor, Metropolis Mall, MG Road, Gurugram, Haryana, 122002 India

      Suite 7E, Level 7, Menara Ansar, 65 Jalan Trus, 8000 Johor Bahru, Johor, Malaysia

      160 Avenue Jean Jaures, CS 90404, 69364 Lyon Cedex, France

      Prievozská 4D, Block E, 13th Floor, Bratislava 821 09, Slovak Republic

      Hlinky 118, Brno, 603 00, Czech Republic

      Laan Van Diepenvoorde 5, 5582 LA, Waalre, Netherlands

      Hansaallee 249, 40549 Düsseldorf, Germany

      Poland Eurocentrum, Al. Jerozolimskie 134, 02-305 Warsaw, Poland

      1/2 Atarbekova str, 350062, Krasnodar, Krasnodar

      1 St Peter’s Square, Manchester, M2 3AE, United Kingdom

      25 Adeyemo Alakija Street, Victoria Island, Lagos, Nigeria

      10 Anson Road, #09-17 International Plaza, 079903 Singapore

      https://corporatewatch.org/floating-prisons-the-200-year-old-family-business-behind-the-bibby-s

      signalé ici aussi par @rezo:
      https://seenthis.net/messages/1010504

    • The Langham family seem quite happy to support right-wing political parties that are against immigration, while at the same time profiting handsomely from the misery of refugees who are forced to claim sanctuary here.


      https://twitter.com/PositiveActionH/status/1687817910364884992

      –---

      Family firm ’profiteering from misery’ by providing migrant barges donated £70k to #UKIP

      The Langham family, owners of Langham Industries, is now set to profit from an 18-month contract with the Home Office to let the Bibby Stockholm berth at Portland, Dorset

      A family firm that donated more than £70,000 to UKIP is “profiteering from misery” by hosting the Government’s controversial migrant barge. Langham Industries owns Portland Port, where the Bibby Stockholm is docked in a deal reported to be worth some £2.5million.

      The Langham family owns luxurious properties and has links to high-profile politicians, including Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden. And we can reveal that their business made 19 donations to pro-Brexit party UKIP between 2003 and 2016.

      Late founder John Langham was described as an “avid supporter” of UKIP in an obituary in 2017. Now his children, John, Jill and Justin – all directors of the family firm – are set to profit from an 18-month contract with the Home Office to let the Bibby Stockholm berth at Portland, Dorset.

      While Portland Port refuses to reveal how much the Home Office is paying, its website cites berthing fees for a ship the size of the Bibby Stockholm at more than £4,000 a day. In 2011, Portland Port chairman John, 71, invested £3.7million in Grade II* listed country pile Steeple Manor at Wareham, Dorset. Dating to around 1600, it has a pond, tennis court and extensive gardens designed by the landscape architect Brenda Colvin.

      The arrangement to host the “prison-like” barge for housing migrants has led some locals to blast the Langhams, who have owned the port since 1997. Portland mayor Carralyn Parkes, 61, said: “I don’t know how John Langham will sleep at night in his luxurious home, with his tennis court and his fluffy bed, when asylum seekers are sleeping in tiny beds on the barge.

      “I went on the boat and measured the rooms with a tape measure. On average they are about 10ft by 12ft. The bunk bed mattresses are about 6ft long. If you’re taller than 6ft you’re stuffed. The Langham family need to have more humanity. They are only interested in making money. It’s shocking.”

      (#paywall)
      https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/family-firm-profiteering-misery-providing-30584405.amp

      #UK_Independence_Party

    • ‘This is a prison’: men tell of distressing conditions on Bibby Stockholm

      Asylum seekers share fears about Dorset barge becoming even more crowded, saying they already ‘despair and wish for death’

      Asylum seekers brought back to the Bibby Stockholm barge in Portland, Dorset, have said they are being treated in such a way that “we despair and wish for death”.

      The Guardian spoke to two men in their first interview since their return to the barge on 19 October after the vessel lay empty for more than two months. The presence of deadly legionella bacteria was confirmed on board on 7 August, the same day the first group of asylum seekers arrived. The barge was evacuated four days later.

      The new warning comes after it emerged that one asylum seeker attempted to kill himself and is in hospital after finding out he is due to be taken to the barge on Tuesday.

      A man currently on the barge told the Guardian: “Government decisions are turning healthy and normal refugees into mental patients whom they then hand over to society. Here, many people were healthy and coping with OK spirits, but as a result of the dysfunctional strategies of the government, they have suffered – and continue to suffer – from various forms of serious mental distress. We are treated in such a way that we despair and wish for death.”

      He said that although the asylum seekers were not detained on the barge and could leave to visit the nearby town, in practice, doing so was not easy.

      He added: “In the barge, we have exactly the feeling of being in prison. It is true that they say that this is not a prison and you can go outside at any time, but you can only go to specific stops at certain times by bus, and this does not give me a good feeling.

      “Even to use the fresh air, you have to go through the inspection every time and go to the small yard with high fences and go through the X-ray machine again. And this is not good for our health.

      “In short, this is a prison whose prisoners are not criminals, they are people who have fled their country just to save their lives and have taken shelter here to live.”

      The asylum seekers raised concerns about what conditions on the barge would be like if the Home Office did fill it with about 500 asylum seekers, as officials say is the plan. Those on board said it already felt quite full with about 70 people living there.

      The second asylum seeker said: “The space inside the barge is very small. It feels crowded in the dining hall and the small entertainment room. It is absolutely clear to me that there will be chaos here soon.

      “According to my estimate, as I look at the spaces around us, the capacity of this barge is maximum 120 people, including personnel and crew. The strategy of ​​transferring refugees from hotels to barges or ships or military installations is bound to fail.

      “The situation here on the barge is getting worse. Does the government have a plan for shipwrecked residents? Everyone here is going mad with anxiety. It is not just the barge that floats on the water, but the plans of the government that are radically adrift.”

      Maddie Harris of the NGO Humans For Rights Network, which supports asylum seekers in hotels, said: “Home Office policies directly contribute to the significant deterioration of the wellbeing and mental health of so many asylum seekers in their ‘care’, with a dehumanising environment, violent anti-migrant rhetoric and isolated accommodations away from community and lacking in support.”

      A Home Office spokesperson said: “The Bibby Stockholm is part of the government’s pledge to reduce the use of expensive hotels and bring forward alternative accommodation options which provide a more cost-effective, sustainable and manageable system for the UK taxpayer and local communities.

      “The health and welfare of asylum seekers remains the utmost priority. We work continually to ensure the needs and vulnerabilities of those residing in asylum accommodation are identified and considered, including those related to mental health and trauma.”

      Nadia Whittome and Lloyd Russell-Moyle, the Labour MPs for Nottingham East and Brighton Kemptown respectively, will travel to Portland on Monday to meet asylum seekers accommodated on the Bibby Stockholm barge and local community members.

      The visit follows the home secretary, Suella Braverman, not approving a visit from the MPs to assess living conditions as they requested through parliamentary channels.

      https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/oct/29/this-is-a-prison-men-tell-of-distressing-conditions-on-bibby-stockholm
      #prison #conditions_de_vie

  • Intelligence artificielle et administration publique numérique
    Cour de cassation
    Cycle 2022 « L’intelligence artificielle : quelle intelligence juridique ? »

    #surveillance #contrôle_social #inégalités_sociales #précarité
    Un véritable florilège de la marche forcée de la société à l’ère de l’administration numérique.

    Toute la vidéo vaut la peine d’être écoutée, voici un extrait si vous voulez des preuves pour refuser les compteurs intelligents
    #linky #gazpar et autres saloperies de surveillance

    https://youtu.be/ppeDpCBYOkk?t=5673

    compter le nombre de douches des chômeurs #belgique

    #Algorithmes #IA

  • Les IA vont-elles nous ATOMISER ?
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IScPYr1NP1Y

    –---
    Les enjeux éthiques et sociaux de l’intelligence artificielle - BNF
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iygdo-UDTA4


    (pas encore vu)

    –—
    IA : quels enjeux quand les algorithmes remplacent l’humain ? Épisode#1 : Véronique Steyer
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVyEoBBWh54


    (pas encore vu)

    –—
    Enjeux épistémologiques et éthiques de l’IA en santé
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6r5PHisTyCs


    (pas encore vu)

    –—
    Comprendre l’Intelligence Artificielle : enjeux et applications par Customs Bridge
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wbPk3xts2qI


    (pas encore vu)

    –—
    Table ronde - IA et création visuelle, les nouveaux enjeux du numérique - avec Samuel Bianchini
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=015TzuzvX98


    (pas encore vu)

    –—
    GPT-4 est-il incontrôlable ?
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dDhTMIao-fM


    (pas encore vu)

    –—

    Je centralise des ressources pour un éventuel dessin sur le sujet.

    #IA #le_tartare

  • Cuisine Generation et Tech Génération
    https://www.cuisine-generation.fr
    https://www.tech-generation.fr

    Deux sites gérés à 100% par des IA (#chatGPT notamment) : tout est généré sans interventions humaines...
    Voir https://twitter.com/arikouts/status/1649163855375769613 pour les explications

    Les 2 fonctionnent aujourd’hui sans aucune intervention humaine, et crées du contenus « original », en choisissant leurs sujets.
    [...]
    Un site de cuisine, qui crées de nouvelles recettes originales chaque jour, ainsi que les photos (qui n’existent donc pas non plus).
    Géré par 4 chefs (qui n’existent pas donc) eux-mêmes inventés par des IA.

    ...même si les titres et textes des recettes sont assez consternants, il y a de quoi s’inquiéter pour ce que le web peut (va ?) devenir...
    (et c’est le référencement des sites qui va prendre une claque aussi...)

    #bot #site_web #IA #chatGPT #cuisine #référencement

  • L’AfD, parti d’#extrême-droite, assume l’utilisation d’images générées par IA | lepetitjournal.com
    https://lepetitjournal.com/berlin/afd-images-ia-359475

    Sur ces clichés générés avec l’#IA génératrice d’images #Midjourney, on trouve entre autres un militant pour le climat hurlant dans la rue ou encore une foule de migrants déchainés. Des #images violentes et choquantes, instrumentalisées à des fins politiques.

    Le chef de groupe parlementaire #Norbert_Kleinwächter, membre de l’#AfD depuis sa création en 2013, s’est exprimé sur le sujet dans le Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. Il se dit « très reconnaissant » de pouvoir utiliser les intelligences artificielles.

    #fausse_image #propagande #mensonge

  • ChatGPT et l’IA générative sont-ils compatibles avec le virage climatique ? - Standblog
    https://www.standblog.org/blog/post/2023/04/17/ChatGPT-et-l-IA-generative-sont-ils-compatibles-avec-le-virage-climatique

    ChatGPT et l’IA générative sont-ils compatibles avec le virage climatique ?

    N’oublions pas le consommation d’eau, en plus de celle d’énergie : Entraîner ChatGPT aurait consommé 700 000 l d’eau. L’utilisation d’une requête ChatGPT nécessiterait 1,5 l d’eau ;

    Vu comment la plupart des entreprises envisagent l’utilisation de l’IA, c’est à dire un usage massif et indiscriminé visant uniquement à la réduction des coûts et l’augmentation de la productivité, on est (encore) très mal barrés sur la question climatique. Une technologie aussi brillante qu’énergivore va donc être utilisée avec entrain pour faire des posts automatisés sur LinkedIn ou générer des images stupides et sans intérêt du type « 2 hommes blancs et un homme de couleur en costard, 2 femmes en tailleur, qui font une réunion et qui sourient bêtement » (tout ça pour pas payer l’abonnement à un service de photos stock).

    #ia #chatgpt #sobriété #climat

  • Ärzte als Verwalter von Mangelzuständen: Der Charité-Streik ist nur ein Anfang
    https://www.berliner-zeitung.de/open-mind/aerzte-als-verwalter-von-mangelzustaenden-der-charite-streik-ist-nu

    12.10.2022 von Ruth Schneeberger - Wenn Medizin nicht endlich wieder vom Patienten her gedacht wird, wird das deutsche Gesundheitssystem zusammenbrechen.

    Viele Menschen machen sich keine Vorstellung davon, was es heißt, in einem Notfall oder bei schwerer Krankheit dringend auf medizinische Hilfe angewiesen zu sein – und sie nicht zu bekommen. In einem reichen Land wie Deutschland, in dem an anderen Stellen noch so viel Überfluss herrscht.

    Andere finden schon allein den Gedanken daran so erschreckend, dass sie sich lieber gar keine Vorstellung davon machen wollen – und verdrängen ihn deshalb so weit in ihr Unterbewusstsein, dass sie Menschen mit Lügen strafen, die von einem schon vor Corona völlig überlasteten Gesundheitssystem berichten. Oder sie hören einfach nicht hin.

    Und dann gibt es noch solche, die sogar behaupten, auch während Corona sei das deutsche Gesundheitssystem an keiner Stelle überlastet gewesen, weder in den Kliniken noch auf den Intensivstationen noch in den Praxen oder sonst wo. Das sind die besonders Ausgebufften. Unter ihnen sind auch einige Politiker. Was sie treibt, ist fraglich. Im besten Falle Ahnungslosigkeit.

    Denn es ist kein Zufall, dass vergangene Woche etwa 1000 Ärzte an der Charité gestreikt haben. Ihnen geht es nicht nur um mehr Geld. Ihnen geht es um halbwegs akzeptable Arbeitsbedingungen in einem ohnehin schwierigen Arbeitsfeld. Spricht man mit den Ärzten oder versucht man auch außerhalb eines Streiks mit Medizinern als Journalist über die Zustände zu sprechen, dann ist da meist sehr viel Vorsicht – und Angst.

    Angst, sich zu weit aus dem Fenster zu lehnen. Angst, sich um Kopf und Kragen zu reden. Angst, den eigenen Arbeitsplatz zu verlieren. „Wir sind wahnsinnig abhängig von unseren Vorgesetzten, zumal an den Unikliniken, wo geforscht wird“, begründet Jana Reichardt, eine der Initiatorinnen des Streiks an der Charité, das Schweigen vieler Kollegen – und die jahrelange Zurückhaltung. Niemand wolle alleine dastehen, wenn er Kritik äußere in einem noch sehr stark autoritär geprägten Arbeitsumfeld.

    Die Pflegekräfte äußern sich – nach ebenfalls viel zu langer Zurückhaltung – seit Corona immer öfter und lauter über die Zustände. Wenn sie merken, dass das auch nichts bringt, schmeißen viele den Job hin. Das führt zum mittlerweile allseits bekannten Pflegenotstand. Die Ärzte hingegen haben bisher in der Mehrzahl geschwiegen. Sie stützen das System. Noch.

    Doch mit dem Streik an der Charité und Graswurzelbewegungen junger Mediziner und Medizinstudenten wird sich auch dies ändern. Im Netz, wo man im Gegensatz zu den klassischen Medien nicht mit Klarnamen auftreten muss, findet sich schon längst der Protest auch der Mediziner. Unter #Medizinbrennt und auf zahlreichen Accounts mit viele Followern berichten Ärzte von immer mehr Kollegen, die aussteigen, weil sie den Wahnsinn der Überforderung nicht mehr mittragen wollen und sonst selbst krank werden würden. Sie berichten von den verbliebenen Fachkräften, wie sie den Notstand nur notdürftig ausgleichen können. Und was das für Folgen für die Patienten haben kann. Im schlimmsten Falle den Tod. Der mit ein bisschen besserer Ausstattung, auch im personellen Bereich, leicht vermeidbar wäre.

    Denn Menschen machen Fehler, aber wenn Mediziner Fehler machen, kann das schnell über Leben und Tod entscheiden. Und unausgeschlafene, gestresste, überforderte Mediziner und Pflegekräfte, die kaum noch Zeit für ihre Patienten haben, machen umso mehr Fehler.

    Wie aber gehen Mediziner damit um, wenn durch ihre Überforderung, durch ihre Fehler ein Mensch zu Schaden kommt – entweder durch Tod oder auch durch lebenslange Behinderung wegen ärztlicher Fehlbehandlung oder Unterlassung? Wenn das Problem der Überforderung schon systemisch ist, und davon berichten inzwischen viele Mediziner, wie gehen sie dann mit den Folgen um?

    Jana Reichardt sagt, es gebe die Möglichkeit, Fehler in einer internen Konferenz zu besprechen, doch eine echte Fehlerkultur gebe es in der Medizin noch nicht. Auch die gelte es jetzt zu entwickeln.

    Man muss sich das mal auf der Zunge zergehen lassen: Mediziner werden weder in ihrem Studium noch im Berufsalltag von Vorgesetzten darauf vorbereitet, mit ihren eigenen Fehlern umzugehen. Wenn also etwa ein Mensch unter ihren Händen stirbt, der bei weniger angespannter Personallage oder bei weniger Zeitnot, einem niedrigeren Stresslevel oder einfach anderen Umständen nicht gestorben wäre, dann muss der Arzt damit selber fertigwerden, es gibt keine professionellen Strukturen, die das auffangen.

    Schlimmer noch: Es gibt kaum Studien oder belastbare Zahlen, die diesen Zusammenhang aufdecken. Ganz Deutschland ist ein Studien- und Datenmangelland in Bezug auf den Gesundheitssektor, auch das hat Corona peinlicherweise gezeigt.

    Im Blindflug durch die Corona-Pandemie

    Und es geht noch absurder: Auch für den Patienten, der womöglich durch einen schweren Ärztefehler für den Rest seines Lebens gezeichnet ist, gibt es kaum Hilfe. Geschweige denn für Angehörige von Verstorbenen. Es hängt sogar alleine vom Willen und der Verfassung des jeweils zuständigen Arztes ab, ob und wie er überhaupt mit Angehörigen darüber kommuniziert. Plus – darauf weist auch der Berliner Intensivpfleger Ricardo Lange immer wieder hin: Vielen Angehörigen werde gar nicht gesagt, dass Oma oder Opa, Mutter oder Bruder am Pflegenotstand gestorben sind, weil niemand auf der Station ihren Herzinfarkt oder Schlaganfall bemerkt hat. Sie würden sich stattdessen dem ruhigen Gewissen hingeben, dass ihre Angehörigen eh gestorben wären – auch wenn das explizit nicht stimmt.

    Die streikenden Ärzte an der Charité und die immer lauter werdende Pflege sind sich jedenfalls inzwischen einig: Ein Weiter-so darf es im Gesundheitssektor nicht geben. Da die Politik sich aber vorwiegend für andere Dinge interessiert, wird das Gesundheitssystem wohl zusammenbrechen, wenn nicht sehr bald ein Umdenken einsetzt, das sich wieder mehr am Patientenwohl orientiert als an der Rendite.

    Wie der todsichere Weg dahin aussieht, hat zuletzt der ärztliche Twitterer Intensivdoc am Beispiel einer Intensivstation passend beschrieben: „Es ist eine Verwaltung von Mangelzuständen. Man versucht, Löcher mit Material zu stopfen, was woanders neue Löcher aufreißt. Und darum dreht sich im Wesentlichen der ganze Tag. Wenn zwischendurch Zeit ist, macht man mal ein bisschen Medizin.“

    #triage #pandémie #iatrocratie

  • L’IA Potemkine et le futur du travail, une conversation avec Antonio Casilli | Le Grand Continent
    https://legrandcontinent.eu/fr/2023/04/07/lia-potemkine-et-le-futur-du-travail-une-conversation-avec-antonio-

    D’abord, il faudrait rappeler comment on arrive à faire ce micro-travail. Si une personne voulait commencer aujourd’hui à faire du micro-travail, elle devrait d’abord savoir vers où se tourner. Il y a plusieurs manières, la plus simple étant de passer par des plateformes sur Internet. Elles ressemblent à des sites classiques d’annonces d’emplois sauf qu’il ne s’agit pas d’emplois formels. C’est du freelancing extrême parce qu’on vous recrute pendant une minute pour regarder 15 photos ou pour laisser un commentaire sur un moteur de recherche. Vous êtes payés quelques centimes, voire quelques dollars. L’inflation monte, impactant ces micro-tâches. Il y a quinze ans, elles étaient payées quelques centimes ; aujourd’hui elles commencent à être payées autour d’un dollar. Quand on fait des estimations, on voit que la médiane tourne autour de deux dollars de l’heure. Ces personnes-là ne sont pas embauchées pour travailler sous contrat, elles n’ont pas d’horaires à proprement parler, elles sont payées pendant les quelques minutes où elles travaillent.

    Quelques mois après le lancement de ChatGPT, le magazine Time a découvert qu’il y avait des personnes au Kenya qui faisaient ce type de micro-tâches, et qui étaient payées entre 1,34 et 2 dollars de l’heure. Ces micro-tâches montrent un changement dans notre manière de fonctionner ; une partie de ces activités se situe en dehors de la civilisation salariale, en dehors de la protection du Code du travail.

    Certaines inégalités se manifestent de manière plus forte chez les populations déjà fragilisées et marginalisées, et qui ont déjà des difficultés d’accès au marché du travail. Dans les pays plus riches du Nord, les femmes sont légèrement majoritaires parmi ceux qui travaillent sur ce type de plateforme. En France, dans notre dernière enquête de 2019, 56 % des micro-travailleurs sont des femmes. Or elles sont systématiquement celles qui gagnent le moins ; celles qui se tournent vers ce type d’activité ont besoin de compléter leur salaire principal, parce qu’elles travaillent à mi-temps. Dans notre enquête, ce sont surtout des femmes vivant seules avec un enfant. Elles doivent jongler entre leur activité principale, le micro-travail, le travail domestique et le soin des enfants. Dans ce contexte-là, elles n’ont pas de temps pour consacrer du temps à chercher les meilleures micro-tâches ou à s’entraîner ; c’est pourquoi elles sont les micro-travailleurs les moins bien payés.

    #IA #travail #micro_travail

  • Écritures numériques : la parole au corps
    Ateliers d’écriture et de création numérique dans le cadre du workshop sur les nouvelles pratiques d’écritures artistiques organisé par Marine Riguet au département Métiers du Multimédia et de l’Internet de l’IUT deTroyes

    http://liminaire.fr/liminaire/article/ecritures-numeriques-la-parole-au-corps

    #Atelier, #Numérique, #Création, #IA, #Vidéo, #Troyes

    • #Big_data et #Intelligence_artificielle (#IA), les #ressources_humaines (sic) #RH vont pouvoir passer à la #gouvernance_algorithmique (#data_driven) en temps réel (deliver value faster)

      While historically management consulting firms have viewed a highly talented workforce as their key asset, the emergence of data technologies has prompted them to turn to the productization of their offerings. According to “Killing Strategy: The Disruption Of Management Consulting” report by CB Insights, one of the main reasons for the disruption of the management consulting industry is the increasing pace of digitalization, and in particular, the expansion of Artificial Intelligence and Big Data capabilities. Incumbents in the consulting world are recognizing competitive pressure coming from smaller industry players, which leverage modern data analytics and visualization technologies to deliver value faster. At the same time, clients of major consulting companies are investing in software systems to collect and analyze data, aiming to empower their managers with data-driven decision-making tools.

      (l’auteur est product leader chez Google et, accessoirement, a fondé une boîte de #coaching : Our mission is to help talented product managers prepare for their job interviews in the most effective ways - ways that land them the offer they’re hoping for!)

  • A Berlin un malade désepéré non admis dans l’hôpital Urban à Kreuzberg met le feu dans un couloir de la clinique.
    https://www.berliner-zeitung.de/mensch-metropole/nach-dem-brand-im-urban-krankenhaus-mitarbeiter-werden-geschlagen-u

    Bei einem Feuer in dem Klinikum in der Nacht zu Montag ist eine Patientin in einem Aufzug stecken geblieben und hat dort eine lebensgefährliche Rauchvergiftung erlitten. Der Brand wurde bisherigen Ermittlungen zufolge von einem Mann gelegt, der gern Patient werden wollte in dem Krankenhaus.

    Après l’incendie on s’occupera enfin du pauvre gars.

    Bisherigen Ermittlungen zufolge soll ein 48-Jähriger das Feuer im Urban-Krankenhaus verursacht haben. Er soll in der Nacht gegen 0.10 Uhr zwei Betten in einem Flur im zweiten Stock des großen Krankenhausgebäudes angezündet haben, wie die Polizei mitteilte. Der Alarm bei der Feuerwehr ging um 0.33 Uhr ein. Als es schon lichterloh brannte, hielt sich der Brandstifter noch immer im Haus auf und versuchte, weitere Feuer zu legen. Feuerwehrleute sahen, wie er versuchte, einen Mülleimer anzustecken, und ergriffen ihn. Die Polizei nahm den 48-Jährigen noch in der Nacht fest und ermittelt wegen schwerer Brandstiftung. Der Verdächtige sei kein Patient gewesen, er habe aber als Patient aufgenommen werden wollen, sagte der Sprecher.

    La mauvaise accessibilité des soins prend des formes dramatiques en Allemagne aussi. Il est temps de développer des formes d’organisation des malades qui les rendent indépendants des soins autoritaires rationnés par l’industrie de la santé.

    #Berlin #médecine #maladie #iatrocratie

  • The Doctor and the Nazis - Hans Asperger’s Nazi Past
    https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/community/articles/the-doctor-and-the-nazis

    On peut dire sans réserve que tous les médecins allemands et autrichiens qui ont exercé leur métier dans le l’empire nazi ont soutenu le régime et participé dans un degré plus ou moins élevé aux atrocités connus.

    Il n’y a pas d’innncocents et cette bande de criminels a bâti le système médical allemand. Leurs élèves font tourner la machine aujourd’hui.

    January 19, 2016 by John Donvan and Caren Zucker - Pediatrician Hans Asperger is known worldwide for the syndrome he first diagnosed. The rest of his story—in Vienna during WWII—has only recently come to light.

    When the question was put to Lorna Wing in 1993, in a transatlantic phone call, she was shocked by it.

    Was Hans Asperger, as a young man, a Nazi?

    The question referred to the Austrian pediatrician whose work gave rise to the well-known cluster of human characteristics known as Asperger’s syndrome. Lorna Wing was the influential London-based child psychiatrist, globally recognized as a leading expert on autism, who had brought Asperger’s syndrome international recognition.

    Wing, who also had an autistic daughter, had stated writing about Asperger’s work only in 1981, after Asperger himself was already dead, when her husband, who knew German, translated a clinical paper the Austrian published in 1944. It contained his observations of “autistic” behaviors—he used that word—in several boys he treated during the years his country was welded into the Third Reich. During that troubled time, and for decades afterward, Asperger lived and worked almost exclusively in his home country, and primarily in Vienna, at the University Children’s Hospital, where he was ultimately named Chair of Pediatrics. Asperger wrote only in German, creating a body of published work which, upon his death in 1980 at 74, was still almost entirely unknown in the United States and Britain, the countries where autism was then most recognized and most studied. Within a decade, however, thanks to the attention Lorna Wing brought to it, Asperger’s syndrome, if not the man himself, was on its way to worldwide renown, both as a diagnosis, and as a source of personal identity for many of those given it.

    But now, in 1993, this phone call. And the question specifically about the man himself.

    Hans Asperger…a Nazi?

    *

    Fred Volkmar of the Yale Child Study Center felt uncomfortable even asking it that day in 1993. But he believed he should, because doubts about Asperger’s character had been raised. And a decision had to be made quickly about whether to posthumously honor Asperger by naming a condition after him in the DSM, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, the “bible” of psychiatry.

    For months, experts led by Volkmar had been looking at studies, running field trials, and debating with one another, in conference rooms, by phone, and by fax, whether Asperger’s syndrome deserved that formal recognition.

    It would be something “new,” in that it recognized impairments in the ability to relate socially in individuals who previously were overlooked as needing support or therapy, due to their otherwise good and even superior levels of intelligence, as well as often precocious and sophisticated use of language. Some of Asperger’s boys, for example, were super smart, as well as creative. At the same time, these boys’ challenges in connecting socially were profound. For being a little odd in their intonation (often either flat or sing-song); for being unable to maintain eye contact with other people; for their tendency to take extremely deep interests in narrow subjects, which were often all they wanted to talk about, they were routinely bullied, friendless, and misunderstood as rude or hostile. Wing, who wanted to help similarly-behaving children she was treating in London during the 1970s and 1980s, saw significant overlap between these behavioral traits so detrimental to social connection—traits Asperger had described with the adjective “autistic”—and those of children with more “classic” autism: the boys and girls, more readily given the autism diagnosis, who exhibited extremely limited speech, and IQs often well below average. Wing began to promote the view, most popular nowadays, that all of these children’s challenges represent multiple manifestations of a single autism “spectrum.” It was to that end that she resurrected Asperger’s work—less to introduce a new diagnostic label, than to illustrate the breadth and depth of that spectrum.

    By 1993, however, Asperger’s syndrome was a serious candidate for inclusion as a standalone diagnosis in the upcoming revision of the DSM. Due out the following year—the book would recognize Asperger’s as one of the “pervasive developmental disorders”—or not—pending the conclusions of Volkmar’s working group.

    *

    Volkmar’s Yale Child Study Center was the leader in Asperger’s research in the United States. At one point, a research request for volunteers with the condition had given Yale a roster of more than 800 families and individuals across the country. At Yale and elsewhere, clinicians who found the concept useful and relevant had been diagnosing patients with Asperger’s without waiting for the DSM to sanction its usage.

    Yet there was still vigorous disagreement over the validity of the concept. It was unclear whether individuals with the diagnosis were truly different in presentation from those described as “high functioning autistic,” an already familiar and much-used concept. Beyond that, it was evident that clinics were independently tweaking the criteria, leading to widespread inconsistency in how the Asperger’s label was applied. Given this, many argued that Asperger’s was not a necessary or useful addition to the diagnostic lexicon.

    On the other hand, the World Health Organization had just endorsed Asperger’s as a stand-alone condition. Of greater relevance, Volkmar himself was among those convinced of its validity, having seen plenty of people at the Yale Child Study Center whose symptoms appeared to justify a diagnosis of Asperger’s. Volkmar, charismatic, persuasive, and thorough, would be one of the final arbiters of whether the condition would be enshrined in the DSM. So it mattered when, with only months left till the new manual was due, he decided to investigate the question of whether Hans Asperger had been a Nazi.

    *

    Eric Schopler, for one, was convinced of it. A psychologist based at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, he was director and lead designer of Division TEACCH, the nation’s first-ever statewide public school program devoted to educating children with autism, which launched in 1971. As such, he was for many years America’s most respected authority on autism, certainly among his colleagues. He was also among those who considered Asperger’s ideas superfluous to the understanding of autism, not to mention sloppily conceived. His attacks on Asperger’s work in the 1990s were noticeably personal, reflecting an antipathy not justified by mere professional disagreement. “The seeds for our current syndrome confusion were sown in the rich soil of his few publications,” he once wrote. In Schopler’s view, Asperger had never “succeeded in identifying a replicable psychiatric syndrome.”

    Schopler’s antipathy can be understood as the bitterness of a man who, as a child, had to flee Germany with the rest of his Jewish family, and who remained suspicious of any adult—German or Austrian—whose career as a medical professional had thrived during the Nazi era. He had no more to go on than that; it was guilt by association. But this did not prevent him from launching a one-man whisper campaign to the effect that Asperger had probably been a Nazi sympathizer, if not a collaborator or actual party member. More than once, Schopler dropped such innuendos in print, in publications he oversaw, such as the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders. There and else¬where, he pointedly made reference to Asperger’s “longstanding inter¬est in the German Youth Movement,” hinting at a connection between Asperger and the Hitler Youth. Still, perhaps because Schopler kept his allusions subtle, most people who knew of Asperger’s syndrome in the 1990s were unaware of any controversy concerning Asperger’s past.

    Volkmar, for example, did not hear about it until late in the DSM review process. But it was not Schopler who brought it to his attention. During the field trials Volkmar was running in order to test the pro¬posed criteria for Asperger’s, two Yale colleagues he held in high esteem raised the subject. One, Donald Cohen, the longtime director of the Yale Child Study Center, had published widely on autism. The other was a young star in the field, a clinician and investigator named Ami Klin. As a psychology PhD candidate in London, Klin had caused a stir with a brilliantly designed study showing that autism affected children’s responses to the sounds of their mothers’ voices. It had been Cohen who personally recruited Klin to Yale in 1989. The two men formed a close mentor-protege relationship based on both a fascination with autism and a powerful sense of Jewish identity. Cohen was an observant Jew and a dedicated student of the Holocaust. Klin had been born in Brazil, the son of Holocaust survivors, and had earned his undergraduate degree in history and political science at Hebrew University in Jerusalem.

    The question the two men kept turning over was whether Asperger might be implicated, in any way, in the medical atrocities ascribed to the Nazis who ruled Vienna. Both knew that the medical profession had already embarrassed itself by its failure to ask this question about several doctors and researchers who had practiced under the Third Reich. Modern textbooks still carried references to diseases named for Nazi-era scientists whose ethics were repellent, if not criminal, such as neurologists whose significant discoveries were made by dissecting the brains of children and adults murdered by the Nazis. A Dr. Franz Seitelberger of Vienna had been a member of the SS, while Professor Julius Hallervorden of Berlin was known to select live patients whose brains he planned to study after their deaths by “euthanasia.” Hallervorden infamously said, “If you are going to kill all these people, at least take the brains out so that the material gets some use.” Yet the terms “Seitelberger disease” and “Hallervorden-Spatz disease” still appeared in academic publications.

    In 1993, Asperger, dead 13 years, never a great presence on the world stage, remained a little-known figure. Uta Frith had published a cursory review of his life and work in 1991, to accompany her translation of his big 1944 paper. In addition, a talk Asperger gave in Switzerland in 1977 had appeared in translation in the magazine of a British autism organization in 1979, but it was not widely distributed. In short, Volkmar could get little information about Asperger on his own, and had no true “Asperger expert” to turn to. It was in that context that he called Lorna Wing, the one person he knew who had met Hans Asperger (one time, over tea), and posed the question to her: Was Hans Asperger, as a young man, a Nazi?

    Lorna Wing gasped. “Hans Asperger, a Nazi?” He could hear her indignation. She spoke of his deep Catholic faith and lifelong devotion to young people.

    “A Nazi? No,” Wing said. “No, no, no! He was a very religious man.”

    It was a short conversation, but it settled the issue.

    A few months later, the DSM-IV appeared. Ninety-four new mental disorders had been proposed for inclusion, but only two made it. One was Bipolar II Disorder. The other was Asperger’s Disorder.

    *

    In 1993, Wing and Volkmar knew nothing, of course, of the information about Asperger that would be unearthed in the years ahead.

    The first warning sign came in 1996. That year, Ami Klin, along with Volkmar and psychologist Sarah Sparrow, began putting together a book they planned to title Asperger Syndrome. Yet Klin still could not shake his misgivings. And, because his name would be on the cover of the book, he decided that something more than a phone call to Lorna Wing was necessary in order to establish that Asperger’s hands were clean.

    In late 1996, Klin began writing to archives and institutes in Germany and Austria, seeking any documentary or other information on the Austrian doctor. This yielded little. But then a professor in Cologne, Germany, referred him to Austrian historian Michael Hubenstorf, who taught at the Institute of the History of Medicine at Berlin’s Free University. “We would like to be able to write that he was a benevolent doctor whose primary concern was his patient’s [sic] well being,” Klin wrote Hubenstorf. “But we are not sure of that.”

    Hubenstorf responded a few weeks later with a four-page letter and a five-page catalog of Asperger’s career postings, promotions, and publications he had assembled. Klin’s concerns, he wrote, were justified. While he had found no record of formal membership in the Nazi Party, Hubenstorf informed Klin that Asperger’s “medical career was clearly set in a surrounding of German Nationalists and Nazis,” and that he was regularly promoted within that setting. He believed the doctor might have downplayed his previous connections to known Nazis such as Professor Hamburger, his onetime mentor, whom Hubenstorf described as “the most outspoken Nazi pediatrician of them all.”

    No ‘smoking gun’ had been found—no evidence that Asperger had directly participated in any Nazi medical crimes.

    “It remains unclear how much of a fellow traveler he was,” Hubenstorf concluded. But his advice to Klin was to err on the side of caution. He recommended against publishing “anything before the utmost effort has been made to clear Prof. Asperger’s past.”

    In the end, Klin chose not to take Hubenstorf’s advice. Weighing everything, he recognized that no “smoking gun” had been found—no evidence that Asperger had directly participated in any Nazi medical crimes. In the meantime, Klin had received a copy of an obituary of Asperger that portrayed him as a warm, gentle doctor devoted to the care of children. Asperger’s daughter, Maria Asperger Felder, also vouched for her father’s reputation when Klin reached out to her. Herself a psychiatrist, she wrote that her father had been at odds with the Nazis’ racial determinism, that he had been an enemy of children’s suffering, and that he had never lost “his lifelong interest in and his curiosity about all living creatures.”

    This was the story of the benevolent doctor that Klin had hoped would turn out to be the truth. In 2000, Klin, Volkmar, and Sparrow published Asperger Syndrome, with a foreword by Asperger’s daughter.

    *

    The “benevolent doctor” version of Asperger had strong appeal, and would inform many assessments of his work. Indeed, an overwhelmingly positive narrative of Asperger as a man of moral rectitude came into focus in the new millennium, elevating him almost to the status of hero. Increasingly, he was seen as a cautious yet brave and canny saboteur of the Nazi project to exterminate intellectually disabled children. This image of him echoed the assessment made by psychologist Uta Frith, in 1991, that Asperger had been an ardent defender of the “misfits” the Nazi eugenics program was designed to destroy. “Far from despising the misfits,” Frith wrote in the introduction to her definitive translation of his 1944 paper, “he devoted himself to their cause—and this at a time when allegiance to misfits was nothing less than dangerous.”

    The hero image was amplified by Berlin psychiatrist Brita Schirmer, who in 2002 called attention to Asperger’s “humanity and his courageous commitment to the children entrusted to him in times when this was by no means obvious, or without danger.”

    In 2007, the Dublin-based psychologists Viktoria Lyons and Michael Fitzgerald wrote a letter to the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders that celebrated Asperger as a man who “tried to protect these children from being sent to concentration camps in World War II.”

    And in 2010, the British autism historian Adam Feinstein published the results of his own reporting trip to Vienna to investigate the rumors that Asperger was sympathetic to Hitler. “The very opposite is more likely to be the case,” he concluded.

    This view of Asperger rested on a number of compelling stories. It was said that he had twice narrowly escaped arrest by the Gestapo while working at the Vienna Hospital, and that he had risked his own safety by failing to report the names of disabled children to the authorities. An entry in his diary, written during a 1934 visit to Germany, seems to shudder at the gathering Nazi storm: “An entire nation goes in a single direction, fanatically, with constricted vision.” His Catholic faith, and his membership in the Catholic youth organization known as Bund Neuland, have also been cited as evidence of his association with a progressive morality that was at odds with the Nazi agenda.

    Above all, this view rested upon Asperger’s clear statements, from early in the Nazi era, defending the right of mentally challenged children to society’s support. During the 1938 talk in which he described his autistic cases for the first time, he declared, “Not everything that falls out of line, and thus is ‘abnormal,’ has to be deemed ‘inferior.’ ”

    Likewise, at the conclusion of his better-known 1944 paper, the one that later caught Lorna Wing’s attention, he saluted the medical profession’s “duty to stand up for these children with the whole force of our personality.”

    Thus, the case seemed strong for Asperger as a humanitarian and liberal thinker. It was an optimistic and inspiring portrait that spoke to modern sensibilities. And it would prove to be seriously flawed.

    *

    One of the best-known laundry detergents in the world goes by the brand name Persil. Originally manufactured in Germany, Persil is the Tide of Europe. In Austria, after World War II, the word came to signify, with grim humor, the furious, sometimes ludicrous, efforts made by Germans and Austrians to clear their reputations. Prompted by the Allies’ “denazification” policy, an effort to purge Nazi Party members and collaborators from positions of influence, millions scurried to track down witnesses to their innocence. Especially prized was the testimony of Jews who could vouch for some moment of kindness or decency shown as the Holocaust unfolded. Often, those seeking to clear their names portrayed themselves as having been victims also, claiming that they had been threatened with arrest by the Gestapo, or stymied in their careers for standing up to Nazi policies. Others insisted that they had gone along with the Nazis as a ruse, and that they had secretly resisted the Nazi system from within. At the end of the process, those who succeeded came away with a document the Austrians called a persilschein, or “Persil certificate,” confirming that they had been certified innocent, or “clean.” Even at the time, there was much cynicism about persilschein.

    Without doubt, there were at least some authentic secret resisters among the Austrians. But a good many of these claims were nothing more than whitewash jobs. Michael Hubenstorf’s letter to Ami Klin had pointed to the possibility that Asperger’s past had also been whitewashed to some degree. Indeed, a second look at the hero narrative offers reasonable grounds for skepticism. To start with, the story of Asperger’s near arrest by the Gestapo had only one source, and that was Asperger himself. As far as is known, he brought it up twice in public: in a 1962 talk and during a 1974 radio appearance. To any astute Austrian familiar with the persilschein phenomenon, this raises the suspicion that Asperger embroidered on his experience of being politically vetted by the Nazi authorities, or perhaps even concocted the story in full. This vetting was a process most public servants had to endure under a law passed after the Anschluss to weed out Jews and anyone else deemed “unreliable.” No doubt Asperger’s being a non-party member was looked into, but in the end the Nazis cleared him.

    Another flag should have been Asperger’s membership in Bund Neuland, which was, by Asperger’s own account, crucial to his development as a young man. While ardently pro-Catholic this group also espoused an anti-modern, pan-Germanic nationalist philosophy, and its tensions with the Nazis stemmed primarily from the Reich’s anti-Church position. Otherwise, there was a fair amount of common ground between Bund Neuland and the Nazis. For example, a 1935 issue of the Neuland monthly periodical highlighted the problem of “excessive Jewish influence” in the upper reaches of society, and discussed the need for “a clean separation” between the “Jews of Vienna” and the rest of the population.

    Then there were Asperger’s own words. His 1934 diary entry about all of Germany moving “in a single direction, fanatically” has been cited—originally by his daughter, and then by others, relying on her account—as evidence that he condemned the Nazification of Germany. Read in full, however, it seems more ambiguous, with hints of awe and admiration as well as consternation: “An entire nation goes in a single direction, fanatically, with a constricted vision, certainly, but also with enthusiasm and dedication, with tremendous discipline and control, with a terrible effectiveness. Now only soldiers—soldierly thinking—ethos—Germanic paganism…” Moreover, it is the sole known excerpt of Asperger’s writing that suggests concern about where things might be headed as of 1934.

    Four years later, on October 3, 1938, there was no ambiguity in the language he used to open a historic address he gave to an assembly of his fellow physicians. The words he used sounded startlingly pro-Nazi, and came at the beginning of the talk in which he discussed his cases—whom he called “autistic psychopaths”—for the first time. This was a full seven months after the Nazi Anschluss, when Austria was absorbed into the Third Reich, yet Asperger’s opening lines were nothing short of a valentine to the newly Nazified Austria.

    “We stand in the midst of a massive renovation of our intellectual life, which encompasses all areas of this life—not least in medicine,” he began. This new thinking, he said, was “the sustaining idea of the new Reich—that the whole is greater than the parts, and that the Volk is more important than any single individual.”

    In a handful of words, this was the defining vision of German fascism, which Asperger, in the next breath, applied to his fellow doctors. This “sustaining idea,” he urged, “should, where it involves the nation’s most precious asset—its health—bring profound changes to our entire attitude.” This applied, he said, to “the efforts being made to promote genetic health, and to prevent the passing on of diseased heredity.” It was hard not to miss the clear reference to the Nazi-driven “science” of race improvement through eugenics. “We physicians must carry out the tasks that fall to us in this area with full accountability,” Asperger declared.

    This salute to the Anschluss, to the Nazis, to the suppression of individuality, and to the task of purifying the genetic lineage of the nation should by itself have dealt a fatal blow to the idea that Asperger secretly resisted the Nazi agenda. A review of other medical talks and papers printed that year in the same weekly journal where Asperger’s appeared shows that the opening of his talk was far from typical. Defenders of Asperger sometimes argue that he had a hidden anti-Nazi agenda—that he sought to throw the Gestapo off his scent by paying lip service to the regime. Brita Schirmer described the preamble as a “deft chess move” on Asperger’s part. His defenders usually assert, as a corollary, that the full text of Asperger’s speech, together with his 1944 paper, constitute an unambiguous argument to protect and nurture all vulnerable children, no matter the level of their disability.

    But Asperger did not, in either the talk or the paper, make that argument. Despite recognizing in passing that autistic traits can be seen in children of both stronger and weaker mental capacity, he had little to say about helping the latter. Rather, he focused on the boys who possessed what he called “social worth”—a term he did not apply to all children. The boys in the group he favored would later be known as the “Asperger’s type,” and decades later as “Aspies.” They were those he described as being “more lightly affected,” as well as not at all rare in the population. Virtually every account of Asperger has him describing his boys, with affection, as “Little Professors”—this presumed a reference to their intelligence and their sometimes pedantic style. (That turns out to be a myth; Asperger himself never actually used the term Little Professors.)

    Asperger made this preference explicit in his 1938 talk, where he admitted that he “thought it more rewarding to choose two [of his] not so severe and therefore more promising cases” to present. That would always be his pattern. In 1944, when discussing his “more lightly affected” children, Asperger was effusive in celebrating how far they could go, dwelling especially on those who had the potential to reach the uppermost echelons of society. To be sure, he was convinced—and said—that autistic traits were more often a detriment than a benefit for the majority of people who had them. But he was pleased to report that, for some, autism delivered special intellectual talents, and that those so endowed could “rise to high-ranking occupations.” He cited, as examples, professors and scientists and even an expert on heraldry. He also reported that some of the more able children he had treated had become assets to a country at war. During the third year of the Second World War, Asperger noted, he had received letters and reports “from many of our former children” serving on the front lines. In 1941, he wrote that these boys were “fulfilling] their role in the professional life, in the military, and in the party.”

    Thus, again, his boys had demonstrated their “social worth”—in terms that the Third Reich appreciated.

    That said, Asperger’s vision of special education and what it could achieve was not quite as exceptional as his supporters suggest. Contrary to popular understanding, special education had its place in Nazi Germany. The Reich allowed that disabled children who could become productive citizens should be afforded support and education to achieve that end. Even the Hitler Youth had special units for the blind and the deaf. But the Nazis drew a line where the cost of supporting a child was expected to exceed that child’s ultimate material contribution to the state. For that child the Nazis had no use; his or her life was worthless.

    Asperger did not go that far in anything he published, and the Catholic faith he professed opposed sterilization and euthanasia. But he never did advocate for the children he seems to have considered less “rewarding.” Indeed, he appeared to write off the possibility of improving outcomes for those whose autistic traits were accompanied by a “pronounced intellectual inferiority.” Rather than lay out a path to helping them, he simply noted the “tragic” fate of such individuals, or at least a sad minority of them. “In the less favorable cases,” Asperger wrote, “they roam the streets as comic originals, grotesquely unkempt, talking loudly to themselves, addressing people in the manner of the autistic.” When speaking of these “less favorable cases,” Asperger never celebrated their autistic differences. Rather, his tone was one of pity.

    *

    Eric Schopler never made the detailed case presented here for a less heroic version of Asperger. Instead of evidence, he had instinct, which perhaps came from being a Jew who had lived part of his life in Germany. Perhaps this instinctive suspicion also explains the nearly complete silence concerning Asperger on the part of one of his most famous contemporaries—Johns Hopkins child psychiatrist Leo Kanner. In 1943, Kanner published psychiatry’s seminal article on autism—the one that introduced the concept to his field. It was so influential that, for some years, textbooks still referred to autism as “Kanner’s syndrome.” Also a Jew—one who assisted hundreds of Jews fleeing the Holocaust in gaining entry to the US, and then finding work—Kanner may have viewed Asperger as too comfortably ensconced in Nazi Vienna, and thus preferred not to recognize him. Interestingly, on the single occasion when Kanner mentioned Asperger in print, he misspelled his name.

    But instinct was not evidence. In short, there was still no smoking gun. And then there was.

    *

    In May 2010, a soft-spoken Austrian academic walked into Vienna’s City Hall and its ceremonial gathering place, the Wappensaal, where a symposium honoring the memory of Hans Asperger was under way. Herwig Czech was a 35-year-old historian and lecturer at the University of Vienna. He had been invited to speak at the symposium by organizers from the Vienna children’s hospital where Asperger had done his most important work. A number of autism’s research luminaries were in attendance, and Lorna Wing herself was scheduled for an afternoon talk.

    There was still no smoking gun. And then there was.

    Czech’s academic specialty was the role of medicine during the Third Reich. It was a hallmark of his work to unearth the discrepancies—often embarrassing—between the accounts medical professionals gave of themselves after the war and their actual conduct during it. Czech’s interest in this area was perhaps connected to his dawning awareness during his boyhood that his warm and loving grandfather had been “a convinced Nazi.” It was not something the old man ever talked about openly, but the knowledge lay heavily on Czech, given what he was learning at school about the darkness of those years.

    Which brought Czech to City Hall, some 30 years after Asperger’s death. Before him, in their hands, all of the seated attendees held the day’s program, its cover featuring a black-and-white photograph of a young Dr. Asperger, wearing a white lab coat and engaged in deep conversation with a young boy—presumably one of his patients. The symposium’s title appeared above the photo: “On the Trail of Hans Asperger.” The event had been prompted by the growing international recognition of Asperger’s work. Over two days, presenters would explore the man’s career and offer assessments of the latest scientific findings regarding Asperger’s syndrome.

    The organizers had received word beforehand that Czech had stumbled across compromising details regarding their honoree. This could not have been welcome news, but in the spirit of scientific inquiry, they encouraged him to keep digging and to report whatever he might find. But once Czech was standing in front of them, there was a slight awkwardness to the situation: Among the 150 or so audience members were his daughter and some of his grandchildren. The title of Czech’s talk, printed in the program brochure, was “Dr. Hans Asperger and the Nazi Child Euthanasia Program in Vienna: Possible Connections.” Awkwardness gave way to surprise, and then shock, as Czech drew a portrait of Asperger that left the hero narrative in tatters, based on a trove of original documents he had excavated. There was, for example, a 1941 letter Czech had found in the archives of the Spiegelgrund—the facility on Vienna’s outskirts which superficially resembled a hospital, but which functioned in reality as a killing center for severely disabled children. Those chosen for death at the Spiegelgrund were poisoned by phenobarbital, which was administered in suppositories, or mixed into the children’s meals. The drug, in sufficient doses, causes the lungs to malfunction. As a rule, “pneumonia” was listed as the official cause of death.

    Asperger’s letter, addressed to the Spiegelgrund’s administration, reported on the recently conducted medical evaluation, at the University Hospital, of a little girl named Herta Schreiber. The handwriting was Asperger’s. Herta was then 2 years old, the youngest of nine children—of whom five still lived at home—and she had been sick all spring since contracting encephalitis. Her condition did not appear to be improving, and in June her mother had brought her to be seen by Asperger at his clinic.

    The letter contained an assessment of Herta’s condition. It was apparent that she had suffered some sort of major insult to her brain: Her mental development had halted, her behavior was disintegrating, and she was having seizures. Asperger seemed unsure of his diagnosis. He noted several possibilities: severe personality disorder, seizure disorder, idiocy. Then, in plain prose, he offered a decidedly nonmedical opinion: “When at home, this child must present an unbearable burden to the mother, who has to care for five healthy children.”

    Having expressed his empathy for Herta’s mother, Asperger rendered his recommendation: “Permanent placement at the Spiegelgrund seems absolutely necessary.” The letter was signed “Hans Asperger.” Everyone in the audience grasped the meaning of Asperger’s letter. It was a death warrant. Indeed, Czech confirmed that Herta was admitted to the Spiegelgrund on July 1, 1941, and killed there on September 2, 1941, one day after her third birthday. Records state that she died of pneumonia. Notes from the hospital archives quoted her mother as agreeing, through tears, that her daughter would be better off this way, rather than living in a world where she would face constant ridicule and cruelty. It was Czech’s assessment that Herta’s parents supported the Nazi agenda.

    The effect in the room was powerful. As they listened, members of the audience stole glances at the picture of Asperger and the boy on the cover of the program. Suddenly, the celebratory nature of their gathering seemed wildly off key, as Czech went on delivering, in a quiet, affectless voice, more disturbing news from the Nazi past.

    In February 1942, he reported, Asperger was the senior pediatrician representing the city of Vienna on a commission asked to review the health status of 210 Austrian children residing in mental hospitals in lower Austria. Several months earlier, the government had begun taking steps to apply mandatory education laws even to children in these hospitals, as long as they were “educable.” A panel of seven experts was charged with compiling a list of the names of those children who should, despite their mental challenges, start attending classes in either traditional academic or special-education settings. In a single day, Asperger and his colleagues went through the records of all 210 children. While 17 were found to be too young for compulsory education, and 36 too old, the panel designated 122 of them as ready for schooling.

    That left 26 boys and 9 girls. Their fate, Czech reported, was known, and he believed Asperger knew it as well. A written summary detailing the commission’s composition, purpose, and procedures clearly stated that those children judged to be not “educable” were to be “dispatched for Jekelius Action” as quickly as possible. When that was written, Erwin Jekelius, a former assistant to Asperger’s mentor Franz Hamburger, was the fiance of Hitler’s younger sister, as well as director of the Spiegelgrund. “Jekelius Action” was a euphemism the commission’s members would have understood quite well. Asperger once said he took a “great risk” by refusing to report children to the authorities. This, clearly, was not one of those times.

    Czech also shared findings suggesting a greater affinity between Asperger and the Nazis than Asperger had admitted to. According to the file the Nazi Party kept on him, he was repeatedly judged to be an Austrian whom the Nazi authorities could trust, even more so as the years went by. Each time Asperger applied for a post or a promotion, he was cleared as someone who, though not a party member, abided by Nazi principles in the performance of his job. In one instance, a party official wrote that he “conforms to the principles of the policy of racial hygiene.”

    In the years following his talk, Czech would discover other evidence of how far Asperger went to conform. He found letters in Asperger’s handwriting that used “Heil Hitler” as their closing salutation. This was not mandatory. He also unearthed a job application filled out in Asperger’s hand in which Asperger described himself as a candidate for the Nazi Doctors Association, a group that functioned as a medical policy arm of the party and was instrumental in closing the medical practices of Jewish physicians. He also learned that Asperger had applied to be a medical consultant to the Vienna branch of the Hitler Youth, though there is no record of him having been accepted. All in all, in Czech’s view, Asperger took care during the war to safeguard his career and to burnish “his Nazi credibility.” Asperger, it would appear, did what was necessary.

    Czech spoke for only 20 minutes or so that day at the Vienna City Hall. Then he stopped to take audience questions. In that pause, Dr. Arnold Pollak, the director of the clinic where Asperger had worked for much of his career, leapt to his feet, clearly agitated. Turning to the room, he asked that everyone present stand and observe a moment of silence in tribute to the many children whose long-forgotten murders Herwig Czech had returned to memory. The entire audience rose and joined in wordless tribute.

    Adapted from In a Different Key: The Story of Autism, Copyright © 2016 by John Donvan and Caren Zucker, published by Crown Publishers, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC.

    #médecins #nazis #Autriche #iatrocratie

  • L’Italie bloque l’usage de #ChatGPT
    https://www.france24.com/fr/%C3%A9co-tech/20230331-l-italie-bloque-l-usage-de-l-intelligence-artificielle-chatgpt

    Dans un communiqué, l’Autorité italienne de protection des données personnelles prévient que sa décision a un « effet immédiat » et accuse le robot conversationnel de ne pas respecter la réglementation européenne et de ne pas vérifier l’âge des usagers mineurs.

    #ia #intelligence_artificielle #OpenAI

    • ChatGPT de nouveau autorisé en Italie
      https://www.liberation.fr/economie/economie-numerique/chatgpt-de-nouveau-autorise-en-italie-20230429_HZAXWZDVXFBYLP2H5IHUDVJQBU

      L’Autorité italienne de protection des données personnelles avait bloqué fin mars ChatGPT, qu’elle accusait de ne pas respecter la réglementation européenne et de ne pas avoir de système pour vérifier l’âge des usagers mineurs.

      Bloqué il y a un mois pour atteinte à la législation sur les données personnelles, le programme d’intelligence artificielle ChatGPT est de nouveau autorisé en Italie depuis vendredi. « ChatGPT est de nouveau disponible pour nos utilisateurs en Italie. Nous sommes ravis de leur souhaiter à nouveau la bienvenue et restons engagés dans la protection de leurs données personnelles », a indiqué un porte-parole de OpenAI vendredi 28 avril.

      L’Autorité italienne de protection des données personnelles avait bloqué fin mars ChatGPT, qu’elle accusait de ne pas respecter la réglementation européenne et de ne pas avoir de système pour vérifier l’âge des usagers mineurs. L’Autorité reprochait aussi à ChatGPT « l’absence d’une note d’information aux utilisateurs dont les données sont récoltées par OpenAI […] dans le but “d’entraîner” les algorithmes faisant fonctionner la plateforme ».

      En outre, alors que le programme est destiné aux personnes de plus de 13 ans, l’Autorité mettait « l’accent sur le fait que l’absence de tout filtre pour vérifier l’âge des utilisateurs expose les mineurs à des réponses absolument non conformes par rapport à leur niveau de développement ».

      Sonnets et code informatique
      OpenAI publie désormais sur son site des informations sur la façon dont il « collecte » et « utilise les données liées à l’entraînement » et offre une « plus grande visibilité » sur la page d’accueil de ChatGPT et OpenAI de la politique concernant les données personnelles. La compagnie assure aussi avoir mis en place un outil « permettant de vérifier en Italie l’âge des utilisateurs » une fois qu’ils se branchent.

      L’Autorité italienne a donc donné acte vendredi « des pas en avant accomplis pour conjuguer le progrès technologique avec le respect des droits des personnes ».

      ChatGPT est apparu en novembre et a rapidement été pris d’assaut par des utilisateurs impressionnés par sa capacité à répondre clairement à des questions difficiles, à écrire des sonnets ou du code informatique. Financé notamment par le géant informatique Microsoft, qui l’a ajouté à plusieurs de ses services, il est parfois présenté comme un concurrent potentiel du moteur de recherche Google.

      Le 13 avril, jour où l’Union européenne a lancé un groupe de travail pour favoriser la coopération européenne sur le sujet, l’Espagne a annoncé l’ouverture d’une enquête sur ChatGPT.

  • The Only Way to Deal With the Threat From AI ? Shut It Down | Time

    https://time.com/6266923/ai-eliezer-yudkowsky-open-letter-not-enough

    Many researchers steeped in these issues, including myself, expect that the most likely result of building a superhumanly smart AI, under anything remotely like the current circumstances, is that literally everyone on Earth will die. Not as in “maybe possibly some remote chance,” but as in “that is the obvious thing that would happen.” It’s not that you can’t, in principle, survive creating something much smarter than you; it’s that it would require precision and preparation and new scientific insights, and probably not having AI systems composed of giant inscrutable arrays of fractional numbers.
    More from TIME

    Without that precision and preparation, the most likely outcome is AI that does not do what we want, and does not care for us nor for sentient life in general. That kind of caring is something that could in principle be imbued into an AI but we are not ready and do not currently know how.

    Absent that caring, we get “the AI does not love you, nor does it hate you, and you are made of atoms it can use for something else.”

    Bon bah y’avait les monstres #Nucléaires et #ChangementClimatique. On peut rajouter #IntelligenceArtificielle dans les menaces à l’échelle de l’espèce humaine.

  • Selon Goldman Sachs, #ChatGPT et l’#automatisation liée à l’IA générative menacent 300 millions d’emplois dans le monde et pourraient contribuer à faire progresser de 7 % le #PIB annuel

    Dans le détail, le rapport indique qu’environ deux tiers des emplois actuels sont exposés à un certain degré d’automatisation par l’IA, tandis qu’elle pourrait remplacer jusqu’à un quart du travail actuel. Les #cols_blancs sont parmi les plus susceptibles d’être affectés par ces nouveaux outils.

    Le rapport souligne aussi qu’aux Etats-Unis, les ​métiers du juridique ainsi que du support et de l’administratif sont particulièrement menacés par ces nouvelles #technologies. En Europe, les #cadres et les métiers liés à l’administratif sont aussi les plus en danger.

    #Goldman_Sachs suggère également que si l’IA générative est largement adoptée, elle pourrait entraîner d’importantes économies de coûts de main-d’oeuvre et la création de nouveaux emplois. […]

    Une étude réalisée conjointement par #OpenAI et l’université de Pennsylvanie a ainsi calculé de son côté que 80 % des employés américains seraient affectés par l’#IA générative pour au moins 10 % de leurs tâches et que 19 % d’entre eux seraient touchés pour plus de la moitié de leurs tâches. L’étude note que les plus diplômés doivent se préparer à davantage d’ajustements que les moins diplômés.

    (Les Échos)

  • #chatGPT, #Bard et cie : nouvelle course à l’IA, et pourquoi faire déjà ?
    https://framablog.org/2023/03/23/chatgpt-bard-et-cie-nouvelle-course-a-lia-et-pourquoi-faire-deja

    Google va ajouter de l’IA générative dans Gmail et Docs. Énième actualité d’un feuilleton permanent depuis « l’irruption » de ChatGPT. Et chez moi, un sentiment de malaise, d’incompréhension, et même de colère. Qu’est-ce que ChatGPT ? Qu’est-ce que l’IA ? Ce sont d’abord … Lire la suite­­

    #Enjeux_du_numérique #Apprentissage_automatique #Derrac #environnement #Google #IA #Intelligence_articielle #Microsoft

  • Rising together: promoting #inclusivity and #collaboration in #Global_health
    https://redasadki.me/2023/03/22/rising-together-promoting-inclusivity-and-collaboration-in-global-health

    The ways of knowing of health professionals who work on the front lines is distinct because no one else is there every day. Yet they are typically absent from the global table, even though the significance of local knowledge and action is increasingly recognized. In the quest to achieve #global_health goals, what value should professionals within global health agencies ascribe to local experience? How do we cultivate a more inclusive and collaborative environment? And why should we bother? A recent roundtable discussion, attended by technical officers and senior leaders, provided an occasion to present and explain how the Geneva Learning Foundation’s #Immunization_Agenda_2030 (IA2030) platform and network could be used to support “consultative engagement” between global and local leaders. (...)

    #IA2030

  • Credible knowers
    https://redasadki.me/2023/03/21/credible-knowers

    “Some individuals are acknowledged as credible knowers within #Global_health, while the knowledge held by others may be given less credibility.” – (Himani Bhakuni and Seye Abimbola in The Lancet, 2021) “Immunization Agenda 2030” or “IA2030” is a strategy that was unanimously adopted at the World Health Assembly in 2020. The global community that funds and supports vaccination globally is now exploring what it needs to do differently to transform the Agenda’s goal of saving 50 million lives by the end of the decade into reality. Last year, over 10,000 national and sub-national health staff from 99 countries pledged to achieve this goal when they joined #The_Geneva_Learning_Foundation’s first #IA2030 learning and action research programme. Discover what we learned in Year 1… Learn more about the (...)

    #Thinking_aloud #Immunization_Agenda_2030 #learning_culture #learning_strategy #Primary_Health_Care_PHC_ #Teach_to_Reach #The_Double_Loop #Universal_Health_Care_UHC_

  • [L’Oeil Carnivore] Les coulisses du cinéma d’animation avec #cédric_nicolas !
    https://www.radiopanik.org/emissions/l-oeil-carnivore/le-coulisses-du-cinema-danimation-avec-cedric-nicolas

    A l’occasion de l’émission 102 de L’oeil carnivore, je reçois Cédric Nicolas illustrateur et directeur technique en animation #3d. Vous pouvez voir son travail en suivant ces liens : https://www.cedriclefox.com https://player.vimeo.com/video/311405835?h=f4bf7d7aee On vous parle aussi des #intelligences_artificielles et comment elles changent le travail des artistes. Cédric a un point de vue interressant sur le sujet. A l’occasion des Oscars, on reviendra enfin sur les films #everything_everywhere_all_at_once et #rrr. Retrouvez la diffusion de cette émission à cette adresse : https://www.twitch.tv/oeilcarnivore

    #art #illustration #oeil_carnivore #unreal_engine #amination #ia #cédric_lefox #oscars. #art,illustration,oeil_carnivore,unreal_engine,cédric_nicolas,intelligences_artificielles,3d,amination,ia,cédric_lefox,oscars.,rrr,everything_everywhere_all_at_once
    https://www.radiopanik.org/media/sounds/l-oeil-carnivore/le-coulisses-du-cinema-danimation-avec-cedric-nicolas_15516__1.mp3

  • Noam #Chomsky: The False Promise of ChatGPT | Portside
    https://portside.org/2023-03-08/noam-chomsky-false-promise-chatgpt

    We know from the science of linguistics and the philosophy of knowledge that #AI minds differ profoundly from how humans reason and use language. These differences place significant limitations on what these programs can do, encoding them with ineradicable defects.

    #IA

    • ChatGPT, Chomsky et la banalité du mal | Philosophie magazine
      https://www.philomag.com/articles/chatgpt-chomsky-et-la-banalite-du-mal

      Et Chomsky de conclure : “ChatGPT fait preuve de quelque chose comme la banalité du mal : plagiat, apathie, évitement […] Ce système offre une défense du type ‘je ne fais que suivre les ordres’ en rejetant la responsabilité sur ses créateurs.”

      Pour en avoir le cœur net, je suis allé demander à ChatGPT s’il connaissait l’idée de banalité du mal et s’il se sentait concerné. Voilà ce qu’il m’a répondu : “Il est vrai que je suis un outil créé par des humains, et par conséquent, je peux refléter les limites et les biais de mes créateurs et des données sur lesquelles je suis entraîné.” Une intelligence servile et sans pensée, c’est en effet une bonne définition de la banalité du mal. Et de l’intelligence artificielle ? »

  • Les dérives naturopathes sectaires ont fleuri depuis le Covid : il est temps que l’Etat sévisse, par Christian Lehmann (Libération)
    https://www.liberation.fr/societe/sante/les-derives-naturopathes-sectaires-ont-fleuri-depuis-le-covid-il-est-temp
    https://www.liberation.fr/resizer/BSYju_EROKG0QAnasKftZDAo4MM=/1200x630/filters:format(jpg):quality(70):focal(2033x1788:2043x1798)/cloudfront-eu-central-1.images.arcpublishing.com/liberation/3DX6VSBDYNBF3NKNVCCEAQ4JOI.jpg

    La démultiplication des #gourous 2.0 entraîne son lot de drames, de pertes de chance pour certains patients convaincus qu’ils sont responsables de leur cancer que la médecine traditionnelle ne pourra soigner, et d’emprises sectaires. Et la responsabilité de l’Etat est fréquemment mise en cause, tant son inaction ces dernières années a été flagrante. Le tapis rouge déroulé pour les #complotistes dans les médias, sans remise en cause significative par l’Arcom, même quand de fausses #informations potentiellement délétères pour la #santé sont véhiculées au nom du pluralisme d’expression, l’adoubement dès avril 2020 par Emmanuel Macron lui-même d’un Didier Raoult qui avait déjà à cette époque enfreint les bonnes pratiques scientifiques avec l’aval d’une pléthore de politiques prêts à suivre le premier homme #providentiel venu, mais aussi, partout sur le territoire, la porosité de certains hôpitaux empilant ostéopathes, spécialistes du reiki et autres naturopathes dans des unités de bien-être destinées aux patients... et aux professionnels de santé. Le #CPF vantant des #pseudo-formations aux thérapeutiques alternatives avec l’argent public. Les chroniques santé de nombreux magazines féminins aux mains de naturopathes et autres gourous du bien-être, participant d’une économie parallèle mafieuse. Le Monde publiant, après une longue série en faveur de l’anthroposophie, un article de Raphaëlle Bacqué vantant les stages de jeûne de sa naturopathe. Et que dire de Doctolib, qui pendant des années a laissé de pseudo-thérapeutes squatter sa plate-forme de réservation médicale et être mis en avant, encore aujourd’hui, sur le même plan que des professionnels de santé ?

    • L’article sur Justpasteit se termine par une revendication fallacieuse :

      Il n’est que temps pour l’Etat de prendre ses responsabilités.

      Le problème avec ce genre de revendications et devises est qu’elles sont le résultat d’un vrai problème mais qu’elles partent du principe que l’état, la sociéte, la politique, les décideurs etc. n’en sont pas responsables et n’en profitent pas

      Nous répétons tout le temps cet argument erronné car nous avons fait l’expérience que c’est un truc qu’on arrive à faire passer à travers les filtres des rédactions des grands médias. Nous voulons nous faire entendre, nous voulons qu’on écoute nos souffrances, qu’on rende compte de nos vies brisées.

      Cette approche de soumission s’impose tant qu’on croit encore qu’il y a quelqu’un, un médecin, un magicien, un Führer qui resoudra nos problèmes à notre place. C’est faux. Il faut revendiquer nos droits, que justice soit faite parce que nous l’exigeons, qu’on accepte que nous accédons aux compétences nous permettant d’affronter et de resoudre les raisons de nos maux.

      Éliminer le fléau des soins magiques ne passe pas par des appels aux charlatans officiels. Nous devons nous attaquer aux soins payants, au droit de pratiquer la médecine comme entreprise privée et lutter pour établir des structures collectives, communales, démocratiques et libres, bien équipées et accessibles pour toutes et tous.

      Revendiquer une intervention de l’état et de ses agents se retourne systématiquement contre nous.

      #iatrocatie #soumission #patients #soins #médecine #magie #foi

  • Comprendre ChatGPT (avec DefendIntelligence)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3fvoM5Er2k

    Mieux comprendre ChatGPT, sans pour autant l’excuser pour ses fakes éhontés. Pour tout comprendre aux IA génératives.
    __________________________
    00:00 Introduction
    03:45 Un peu de contexte
    05:06 Les modèles de langage
    05:37 L’énigme
    06:45 La chambre chinoise
    12:05 Comment ça fonctionne ?
    17:12 L’exposition médiatique
    22:50 Bien interroger ChatGPT
    26:39 Bien vérifier ce que dit ChatGPT
    28:01 Détecter des textes générés par IA
    33:45 Problématiques sur les données
    39:24 À venir dans les moteurs de recherche
    46:43 Conclusion

    ___________________________
    ERREURS SIGNALEES
    – à 13min : selon OpenAI le modèle GPT3 a été entraîné à partir de 570 Go de textes, pas juste 50Go (ça c’est la taille des données Wikipedia)
    – à 48min : la citation n’est pas de Saint Thomas d’Aquin, mais bien de Saint-Thomas, l’apôtre.

    #IA #ChatGPT

  • Cyberattaque de la mairie de Lille : « on apprend à travailler sans ordinateur » Alice Rougerie

    Retour au papier et au crayon à la mairie de Lille. Les ordinateurs restent éteints, les systèmes informatiques sont désactivés depuis la cyber attaque qu’a subi la ville mardi soir. Et cela pourrait durer.

    Ecran noir toujours sur les ordinateurs de la ville. A la mairie de Lille, une nouvelle organisation se met en place et cela pourrait durer plusieurs semaines. Trois, au moins. « Mais 95% des services fonctionnent normalement pour les usagers, rassure Audrey Linkenheld, première adjointe au maire de Lille, les plus touchés sont l’administratif et le support, cela ne change rien pour les Lillois. » Certes, le standard de la mairie restera coupé jusqu’à lundi mais les services courants fonctionnent : état civil, cantine, etc.

    Par mesure de précaution, tous les ordinateurs des employés restent éteints donc, jusqu’à nouvel ordre. « On se voit, on se parle, on va d’un bureau à l’autre, ça marche bien aussi », ironise l’élue. Une autre mesure, encore plus contraignante, a même été prise :

    Maintenir hors ligne tous les systèmes informatiques : une mesure décidée dès mercredi matin, quelques heures après la cyberattaque. Pas d’informatique, cela veut dire, plus de billetteries pour les services payants de la ville comme le zoo, les piscines ou les musées. Pas question pour la mairie de fermer ces lieux. Mais pas moyen non plus de payer par carte bancaire, seuls les chèques et espèces pourraient être acceptés. Alors sans parler de « gratuité » , la mairie parle pour l’instant de lieux « ouverts ». « Nous réfléchissons à un plan de continuité pour ces activités, précise l’adjointe au maire, il pourrait être présenté en début de semaine prochaine ». 
    . . . . .
    La suite : https://france3-regions.francetvinfo.fr/hauts-de-france/nord-0/lille/cyberattaque-de-la-mairie-de-lille-c-est-une-source-de-

    #dématérialisation des #services_publics #Cyberattaque #mairie #Lille #administration

    • #Quebec La transition informatique à la SAAQ tourne au cauchemar pour certains commerçants Stéphane Bordeleau - Stéphane Bordeleau - Radio Canada

      Les perturbations entourant l’implantation du système SAAQclic à la Société de l’assurance automobile du Québec (SAAQ) causent de sérieux maux de tête à des commerçants du secteur automobile, dont certains se retrouvent dans l’incapacité complète de livrer des véhicules aux clients.

      C’est notamment le cas de Stéphane Laframboise, président d’Unik Auto Import, une entreprise d’importation de véhicules automobiles, dont les opérations sont paralysées depuis des jours faute de pouvoir mener à bien les processus d’immatriculation à la SAAQ.

      Lorsqu’ils achètent des véhicules à l’extérieur du Québec, les concessionnaires ou les entreprises doivent d’abord les faire intégrer à la banque des véhicules du Québec via les services de la SAAQ. Ils doivent ensuite faire subir une inspection mécanique obligatoire au véhicule et finalement le faire immatriculer au nom du client.

      Tout cela nécessite en moyenne trois rendez-vous à la SAAQ pour un petit commerçant comme Stéphane Laframboise. Du moins avant l’arrivée du nouveau système informatique SAAQclic, qu’il a rebaptisé “le crash”.

      En ce moment, il y a plein de mes véhicules qui sont pris au CN “. Je suis obligé de les laisser là. J’ai aussi un entrepôt que j’ai loué à Lachine [3500 $ par mois] qui est complètement plein de véhicules et j’en ai huit chez nous depuis hier. Ça n’a aucun sens !”

      “J’ai un petit marché. C’est 100 véhicules par année. Ça demande tout l’effort du monde. En ce moment, j’ai 100 000 $ en inventaire, je fais quoi avec ça ? Je ne suis pas Lexus”, s’inquiète l’importateur.

      Tout naturellement, Stéphane Laframboise s’est tourné vers la ligne téléphonique de soutien aux commerçants de la SAAQ, où il a passé des heures sans jamais parler à un humain. La ligne raccroche automatiquement après 3 h 20 d’attente. (#IA)

      Dans l’incapacité de faire intégrer, inspecter et immatriculer les véhicules qu’elle achète, l’entreprise de Stéphane Laframboise est complètement paralysée. “On est foutu, sincèrement […] qu’est-ce que tu veux que je fasse”, se demande le commerçant.

      La situation est aussi problématique dans les plus gros commerces et les concessionnaires de grandes marques, confirme Ian P. Sam Yue Chi, PDG de la Corporation des concessionnaires automobiles du Québec.

      “Oui, on vit des difficultés à l’échelle de tous les concessionnaires du Québec. Vous savez, on en a 890”, explique M. Sam Yue Chi.

      Or, pour les concessionnaires, qui doivent déjà composer avec des délais de livraison en raison des perturbations de la chaîne d’approvisionnement, l’ajout de délais supplémentaires dus aux problèmes informatiques à la SAAQ n’était pas envisageable.
      . . . . .
      La suite : https://ici.radio-canada.ca/nouvelle/1960499/saaq-concessionnaires-commercants-delais-majeurs

      #voitures #immatriculation nouveau #logiciel #dématérialisation des #services_public #informatisation

    • #Canada : Hélicoptères militaires : Ottawa devra payer pour résoudre un problème de logiciel La Presse canadienne - Radio Canada

      Un problème logiciel toujours non résolu, défini comme la principale cause d’un accident mortel d’hélicoptère militaire au large des côtes grecques en 2020, sera éventuellement réglé, mais aux frais d’Ottawa − à un coût et dans un délai encore à déterminer.

      Le ministère de la Défense et le constructeur américain Sikorsky Aircraft ont déclaré qu’ils avaient convenu d’un plan pour résoudre le problème du pilote automatique, qui permet à l’ordinateur du CH-148 Cyclone de prendre la place des humains dans certaines situations. Mais près de trois ans après que cet ennui technique a provoqué la chute d’un Cyclone dans la mer Ionienne, tuant les six militaires canadiens à bord, on ne sait toujours pas à quel moment cette solution sera mise en oeuvre


      La porte-parole du ministère de la Défense, Jessica Lamirande, a indiqué dans un courriel qu’il était trop tôt pour discuter des coûts et du calendrier. Une chose a cependant été finalisée : c’est le fédéral qui paiera la note.

      Mme Lamirande a précisé que les mises à niveau prévues des logiciels ne sont pas couvertes par le contrat de 9 milliards de dollars conclu par le gouvernement canadien avec Sikorsky en 2004 pour la livraison et l’entretien de 28 hélicoptères Cyclone.

      . . . . . .
      La suite : https://ici.radio-canada.ca/nouvelle/1960670/sikorsky-aircraft-helicoptere-militaire-canada-logiciel