• California wildfires raise alarm on water-guzzling #AI like #ChatGPT

    If there weren’t enough of an argument against AI from an environmental standpoint, a new waterfall of data might push even the most ambivalent consumer over the edge.

    Per the International Energy Agency, energy consumption by global data centers could more than double by 2026, “reaching levels that exceed large nations.” Ironically, “while we’re using AI to solve some of the world’s biggest challenges—from climate modeling to health-care breakthroughs—we’re also contributing to an environmental crisis of a different kind,” Chris Gladwin, a tech founder and CEO, wrote for Fortune recently.
    How much water does AI use?

    Now, reporting finds that OpenAI’s ChatGPT—which uses the GPT-4 language model—consumes 519 milliliters or just over one bottle of water, to write a 100-word email. That’s according to the Washington Post in a research collaboration with the University of California, Riverside.

    In order to shoot off one email per week for a year, ChatGPT would use up 27 liters of water, or about one-and-a-half jugs. Zooming out, WaPo wrote, that means if one in 10 U.S. residents—16 million people—asked ChatGPT to write an email a week, it’d cost more than 435 million liters of water.

    While much has been made about the power usage each ChatGPT prompt immediately necessitates, the water conversation has gained additional steam in recent months.

    As WaPo explained, every prompt a user enters into ChatGPT is quickly turned into code, and “flows through a server that runs thousands of calculations to determine the best words to use in a response.” All those calculations go through real, physical servers which are housed in enormous data centers around the world. Spitting out an answer—or answering a command—makes the servers heat up, like an under-duress old laptop.
    Why does AI use water?

    This is where water comes in; to keep those ever-important servers from overheating and breaking down, the data centers rely on cooling mechanisms, often via “cooling towers” that themselves require water. Each facility, depending on the climate where it’s based, uses a different amount of water and electricity. West Des Moines, Iowa, is quickly becoming a popular destination, owing to a temperate climate that calls for fewer cooling interventions.

    “We haven’t come to the point yet where AI has tangibly taken away our most essential natural water resources,” wrote Shaolei Ren, an associate professor of engineering at UC Riverside who has been trying for years to quantify AI’s climate impact. Nonetheless, Ren called AI’s increasing water usage “definitely concerning.”

    Amid rapid population growth and a changing climate, “depleting water resources and aging water infrastructures” are some of the most preeminent challenges, he wrote in November. “The concern is not only about the absolute amount of AI models’ water usage, but also about how AI model developers respond to the shared global challenge of water shortage.”
    How are AI companies addressing water and energy use?

    Droughts, he noted, are among the most immediate consequences of climate change, and it’s incumbent upon businesses to address water usage in their operations—and tech firms using generative AI top that list. “We already see heated tensions over water usage between AI data centers and local communities,” Ren wrote. “If AI models keep on guzzling water, these tensions will become more frequent and could lead to social turbulence.”

    #Google and #Microsoft report rising water consumption

    In Microsoft’s sustainability report last year, the company said its global water consumption had spiked 34% between 2021 and 2022. Over the same period, Google’s water usage rose 20%, it wrote in its own report. “It’s fair to say” that the majority of that growth at both companies “is due to AI,” Ren told the AP at the time. (Microsoft’s data center used up 700,000 liters of water in training GPT-3, WaPo reported.)

    Holly Alpine, who was once Microsoft’s senior program manager of Datacenter Community Environmental Sustainability, resigned from the company earlier this year on principle, she wrote for Fortune, due to the company’s ecologically irresponsible AI development.

    “Analyst reports suggest that advanced technologies—such as AI or machine learning—have the potential to increase fossil fuel yield by 15%, contributing to a resurgence of oil and potentially delaying the global transition to renewable energy,” Alpine wrote. “The real-world impacts are staggering: A single such deal between Microsoft and ExxonMobil could generate emissions that exceed Microsoft’s 2020 annual carbon removal commitments by over 600%.”

    When she was a Microsoft employee, she wrote, she witnessed “dozens” of such deals.

    https://fortune.com/article/how-much-water-does-ai-use
    #eau #IA #intelligence_artificielle #Californie

  • Une année 2024 parsemée d’embûches en technologie Stéphanie Dupuis - Radio Canada

    Le domaine des technologies a connu quelques échecs en 2024, dont la panne de CrowdStrike, le Humane AI Pin et l’Apple Vision Pro.

    Entre les licenciements massifs, une panne informatique mondiale et des gadgets d’intelligence artificielle inachevés, les 12 derniers mois n’ont pas été des plus prolifiques dans la sphère technologique.

    Des licenciements massifs
    L’année a été particulièrement difficile pour les industries technologiques, dont celle du jeu vidéo.

    “Il n’y a pas un mois où on n’a pas annoncé de licenciements dans le monde de la technologie et des jeux vidéo. Je pense qu’il n’y a pas un studio qui n’a pas été affecté par des coupures et des licenciements”, dit Carl-Edwin Michel, chroniqueur techno.

    L’industrie québécoise a aussi été éclaboussée par la révision à la baisse des crédits d’impôt pour les studios de jeux vidéo, annoncée en mars par le ministre des Finances, Eric Girard.

    C’est vraiment dommage, car ça affectera beaucoup de studios de jeux vidéo.

    D’après la Guilde du jeu vidéo du Québec, la simple annonce du budget Girard a déjà freiné l’élan de studios internationaux qui comptaient investir dans la production locale.

    “J’espère qu’ils vont changer de cap, mais pour l’instant, ça en est au point mort”, déplore-t-il.

    La panne mondiale de CrowdStrike
    Un bilan de fin d’année en technologie ne serait pas digne de ce nom s’il ne comprenait pas le cafouillage entourant la panne mondiale de CrowdStrike sur les appareils de Microsoft.

    Un problème dans un système de tests de mise à jour a causé une anomalie qui a paralysé quelque 8,5 millions d’ordinateurs dans le monde, dont plusieurs ont nécessité l’intervention manuelle d’équipes techniques en informatique.

    Au Canada, les douanes, les hôpitaux, les banques, les marchés boursiers ainsi que les télécommunications et les médias ont été touchés.

    Des avions ont été cloués au sol pendant la panne informatique.

    Le secteur aérien aussi : la compagnie Delta Air Lines a dû annuler des milliers de vols et a mis des semaines à se remettre de la panne. Ces délais lui ont valu une convocation au Congrès américain, au même titre que CrowdStrike, afin d’aborder ces déboires informatiques.

    Des actionnaires de la firme de cybersécurité ont aussi entamé un recours collectif contre l’entreprise, se sentant trompés quant à la fiabilité de ses tests logiciels.

    CrowdStrike devrait encore faire couler de l’encre en 2025.

    L’IA nous en a fait voir de toutes les couleurs
    En technologie, janvier rime souvent avec innovation, puisque c’est à ce moment que se tient l’important salon mondial Consumer Electronics Shows (CES).
    Début 2024, ce sont des gadgets portatifs alimentés par l’intelligence artificielle (IA) qui ont volé la vedette de cette grand-messe de l’industrie : le Humane AI Pin et le Rabbit R1.

    Le Rabbit R1 est un appareil de poche qui peut recevoir des commandes en langage naturel et avec lequel on navigue au moyen d’une roulette. Le Humane AI Pin, pour sa part, se porte sur les vêtements, est doté d’une caméra et utilise la projection et les mains pour interagir avec le système.

    Ces deux gadgets, issus de jeunes pousses, devaient remplacer notre téléphone intelligent, mais il n’en a rien été, selon Carl-Edwin Michel.

    On se rend compte que des entreprises ont surfé sur la vague de l’IA avec toutes sortes de gadgets qui ne font pas [le poids].
    Une citation de Carl-Edwin Michel, chroniqueur techno

    L’IA a également été au cœur de nombreuses mobilisations, notamment judiciaires, pour violation de droit d’auteur. Des médias canadiens se sont également unis pour s’en prendre à OpenAI, qu’ils accusent d’utiliser leurs contenus en ligne sans leur consentement pour entraîner son outil ChatGPT.

    Le quotidien américain The New York Times, déjà en poursuite judiciaire contre OpenAI et Microsoft depuis 2023, a aussi mis en demeure Perplexity AI afin que l’entreprise cesse de piller ses contenus. La Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) a pour sa part porté plainte contre Suno et Udio, deux outils qui permettent de générer de la musique à partir d’une simple requête.

    Si l’IA n’a pas chamboulé les élections américaines de la manière dont on le croyait, elle a tout de même “été utilisée à mauvais escient sur les réseaux sociaux”, note le chroniqueur techno. “Des personnes comme Elon Musk, qui a utilisé l’IA pour abriter et créer de fausses nouvelles sur son réseau social X, avec de fausses images de Kamala Harris, par exemple [...] je trouve ça déplorable.”

    Déception pour l’Apple Vision Pro
    Le casque de réalité mixte d’Apple, le Vision Pro, était attendu depuis longtemps par les adeptes du métavers. Vendu au Canada au prix de 5000 $ plus taxes, beaucoup ont rapidement déchanté… dont Carl-Edwin Michel.

    On s’est rendu compte que ce casque n’a rien d’extraordinaire, à part le prix qui, lui, est extraordinaire.
    Une citation de Carl-Edwin Michel, chroniqueur techno

    Le coup de grâce pour Apple a été le fait que le casque Meta Quest 3, lancé en octobre 2023, soit “capable de faire plus ou moins les mêmes choses, à une fraction du prix”, souligne le chroniqueur techno, qui a pu tester les deux appareils.

    La présence du géant américain Meta depuis des années dans le créneau des expériences immersives lui offre une longueur d’avance pour créer des partenariats et des applications pour ses appareils – l’une des principales critiques formulées à l’égard du casque d’Apple est un manquement à ce chapitre.

    Le chroniqueur reconnaît néanmoins que la qualité d’image du produit d’Apple est nettement supérieure à celle de son adversaire. “Même si l’expérience est de meilleure qualité du côté du Vision Pro, à application identique, je vais préférer le Meta Quest et payer moins cher”, ajoute-t-il.

    Les attentes étaient élevées pour l’Apple Vision Pro, surtout “qu’un Québécois a été impliqué dans son développement”, ajoute-t-il. Apple a racheté la jeune pousse montréalaise VrVana et sa technologie de réalité mixte pour plus de 30 millions de dollars en 2017.

    Des abonnements de plus en plus chers
    Disney+, Spotify, Netflix… Pratiquement tous les services de diffusion en continu ont connu des hausses de tarifs, ou des changements aux formules d’abonnement qui ont eu des répercussions sur le portefeuille de la population canadienne en 2024.

    L’abonnement premium à Disney+, par exemple, est passé de 120 $ à 160 $ par an. Celui de Spotify a connu une hausse de 24 % en décembre. Netflix, pour sa part, a débranché pour de bon sa formule de base sans publicités, forçant les gens à payer plus cher pour l’offre semblable, ou moins cher pour une offre avec publicités.

    On a décidé de couper le câble, car les applications, c’est l’avenir. [...] On en est à repenser si ça en vaut encore la peine.
    Une citation de Carl-Edwin Michel, chroniqueur techno

    “C’est courant, dans la culture tech, d’offrir un service pas très cher et pratique au début, comme Airbnb. Mais que dès que la masse critique embarque, on augmente les prix”, explique-t-il.

    Le chroniqueur techno se réjouit tout de même de voir émerger des solutions de rechange, moins chères, avec publicités, comme c’est le cas pour Netflix et Crave, par exemple.

    Les géants des réseaux sociaux esquivent certaines responsabilités
    TikTok Canada et Meta devaient être entendues à la Commission spéciale sur les impacts des écrans et des réseaux sociaux sur la santé et le développement des jeunes (CSESJ) une première fois fin septembre. L’audition a été reportée à la fin novembre.

    Entre-temps, la filiale canadienne de TikTok a été dissoute par Ottawa, évoquant “des risques pour la sécurité nationale” et annulant du même coup sa présence à la nouvelle séance. Meta s’est désistée à son tour quelques jours plus tard, forçant l’annulation de l’audition.

    C’est important que ces plateformes, qui sont très importantes au Québec et au Canada [...] soient redevables.
    Une citation de Carl-Edwin Michel, chroniqueur techno

    À cela s’ajoute le blocage des nouvelles sur les plateformes de Meta, maintenu depuis plus d’un an, et dont les discussions sont au point mort entre l’entreprise et le gouvernement.
    Celui-ci n’exclut pas de recourir au pouvoir d’assignation à comparaître.

    #gamelle #échec #illusions #technologies #CrowdStrike #cafouillage #microsoft #fiabilité #ia #ChatGPT #OpenAI #Apple #Vision_Pro #métavers #Disney+ #Spotify #Netflix #v

    Source : https://ici.radio-canada.ca/nouvelle/2128411/annee-2024-flop-techno

  • Amazon Paused Rollout of Microsoft Office for a Year After Hacks - Bloomberg
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-12-12/amazon-paused-rollout-of-microsoft-office-for-a-year-after-hacks

    Amazon.com Inc. has delayed the deployment of #Microsoft Corp.’s cloud-based #Office suite for a year as the two companies work to resolve Amazon concerns about the security of the bundle of email and productivity software.

    The tech giants signed a deal last year to provide #Amazon employees with Microsoft 365, the cloud-based package that includes Word, Outlook, Windows and other software. Amazon has long used versions of Office installed on its own servers.

  • Microsoft says it built an Xbox game store on Android but can’t launch it - The Verge
    https://www.theverge.com/2024/11/27/24307867/microsoft-google-xbox-game-store-android-purchase-games

    The ability to sell games in its Xbox app on Android is ‘ready to go live’ according to Microsoft. However, the company isn’t specific about what’s holding it back

    Tim Sweeney sur X : “Google’s statement is deceitful. Shame on them. They well know that the 30% cut they demand is far more than all of the profit from game streaming. They know this because they blew hundreds of millions of dollars building the failed Stadia game business themselves.”
    https://x.com/TimSweeneyEpic/status/1861995680752918586

    #jeux_vidéo #jeu_vidéo #business #mobile #google #google_play #microsoft #xbox #epic_games

  • These alternatives to popular #apps can help reclaim your online life from billionaires and surveillance

    There is immense power in being in control of your own data. As ownership and governance of apps and online services consolidate, it’s understandable if you want to consider your options when it comes to where you store your private data and records of your everyday activities.

    Fortunately, not every service out there is trying to monetize your personal data, and many offerings are just as good (if not often better) as their commercial or ad-supported rivals.

    Take a minute to think about what you’d want to leave behind. #Big_Tech giants that hoard your data? Subscription services? Invasive ad tracking? Government surveillance? Your needs and risks are unique to you, but hopefully a few of these recommendations help to hit the spot.

    #Wallabag the stories you want to read later

    If you ever wanted to read something later, like a news story, feature article, or anything else with a web address, save it to your #Wallabag. This read-later web-archiving service may not have the same ring to it as its main commercial rival Pocket, but Wallabag is a strong competitor with article-saving tools and features as good as what Pocket offers. You can save your must-reads for later on a Wallabag server you can run for free on a network attached storage (NAS) server that you host somewhere in a closet at home, or hosted in the cloud for a low-cost subscription.

    Why does this matter? Other read-later apps track usage in order to find trends and recommend content (often sponsored) to you. Some want this, and that’s cool! But some don’t.

    #Signal is the encrypted messaging app to use

    Signal is one of the most revered secure messaging apps for the simple reason that, by design, it knows nothing about you. On occasion, Signal will make this point by publishing the search warrants it sometimes receives, knowing that it can’t provide to the authorities data that it doesn’t keep. Signal’s security has been called the “gold standard” of messaging apps by cryptography experts. Signal is free to download and use but relies on donations as a nonprofit.

    Why you should care: It’s not just your private messages and calls that Signal keeps encrypted from prying eyes and ears, but Signal also crucially scrambles who you contact and communicate with, and when, which can also be incredibly revealing about a person’s life.

    #Nextcloud is a self-hosted #Dropbox alternative

    Nextcloud is a Dropbox alternative that features all of the document editing and sharing features you’d expect from a file storage system. A huge benefit to Nextcloud is that you can host a server yourself for free at home, where you can keep it private and under your control, or have a Nextcloud server run for you by a specialized hosting provider.

    Nextcloud is built with security in mind and provides you end-to-end encrypted access to your files from your phone or any other device you have. Or, if simply having a self-hosted Dropbox-like alternative as a storage backup for your most sensitive and personal files sounds like something you’d want, Nextcloud is a great place to start.


    Why does this matter? Cloud storage is often secure and private in some ways, but the companies that run them are beholden to law enforcement and may also invisibly scan your files (for good reason, but still) that can get you suddenly and permanently banned from your online accounts. Hosting your own doesn’t mean you are free from police showing up at your house with a warrant, but at least you’d be aware of it.

    Never forget your #passwords again with #Bitwarden

    Password managers are a great investment in your personal security; these apps securely store your passwords, passkeys, credit cards, and other secrets, so you don’t have to remember them. Bitwarden is a popular open source password manager that helps you log in quickly to your favorite sites and auto-fills your credit card details when you want to pay for something, and more. You can access your Bitwarden password manager anywhere, including from your phone. Bitwarden is free for anyone to use, but low-cost for additional features.


    Why does this matter? When it comes to security of password managers, the more eyeballs inspecting the source code to ensure its reliability and integrity, the better. And while other password managers are also good, open source systems like Bitwarden are more readily auditable and open about their software development process.

    #Joplin and #Notesnook keep your notes and scribbles encrypted

    For those who want to leave #Google_Docs or #Microsoft_365 behind, there are plenty of note-taking apps that keep all of your notes, thoughts, and scribbles in one place that you can access anytime. Joplin is a popular document and productivity app that keeps your files organized, encrypted, and in open formats (like Markdown) so you can take them with you anywhere else. Notesnook is another note-taking app that lets you export your notes to use with other apps and is end-to-end encrypted so that nobody can read your files. The same cannot be said for Google Docs!


    Why does this matter? Big companies like Google and Microsoft are increasingly unifying their services, which today means exposing your notes, emails, and files to their AI systems. This can be useful for sure, but if you’d rather just have a simple, cross-platform text syncing app, there are plenty of options that don’t do any kind of invasive analysis at all.

    #Ente is an encrypted vault for your #photos

    If you want to leave behind Apple Photos, #Flickr, Google Photos, YouTube, and the like, Ente.io bills itself as a privacy-focused photo storage app designed simply to securely back up all of your photos and videos to the cloud. Ente scrambles your data with a password only you know, protecting your memories from anyone else, and backs up your data in multiple locations around the world for safekeeping. Plus, Ente offers all of the photo management and sharing features you need from a photo app. Ente is free for basic accounts and reasonably priced for more storage options.


    Why does this matter? Much like notes and documents, images are a huge target for AI systems. Auto-tagging your friends might sound helpful, but it requires consent. You should have to opt in before a machine learning model scans every face you’ve ever taken a picture of. That alone is a good reason to look at an independent service that gives you a little more choice.

    #Open_Scanner is a very simple document-scanning app

    Document scanning doesn’t have to be a complicated or convoluted process. Open Scanner is an incredibly simple point-and-click document-scanning app for iPhones, and its code is published online. That’s it. Sometimes that’s the true beauty of disconnecting from profit-driven corporations that bloat their apps with AI junk and features nobody really needs. Open Scanner can snap receipts, notes, textbooks, or anything else you can point your phone at.

    Why does this matter? Unless you really need a professional scanner, your phone is more than good enough and probably better than a lot of cheaper scanners out there. Skip the need for any printer-brand hardware gear and use something simple and free.

    Aggregate your news headlines using #FreshRSS

    #RSS is an amazing web technology that lets you subscribe to feeds of information from your favorite sites, blogs, news sources, and more. Most news sites offer RSS feeds (TechCrunch does!) that deliver the headlines to RSS-compatible apps, known as RSS readers. There are loads of RSS readers to choose from. For more than a decade, FreshRSS has been one of the most feature-packed RSS readers for its overall simplicity. You can self-host an instance, or deploy a private server to a specializing cloud host. Once you get your favorite feeds subscribed, the end result is like having your very own self-updating digital newspaper.

    Why does this matter? You’d be surprised how different the news feels when you see it this way. And having your own RSS setup skips the kind of sponsored posts and tracking that you see on hosted services, much like the read-it-later ones.

    Own your livestreams with #Owncast

    For those who broadcast their own shows, gameplay, or anything in between, Owncast is a self-hosted streaming system for setting up and hosting livestreams. Owncast is wildly popular, as it’s free, fairly easy to use, and works with your existing livestreaming gear. You might not have thought about livestreaming before, but this is a good way to wade into unfamiliar but friendly waters.

    Why does this matter? Sites like Twitch are certainly popular, but you may not want to rely entirely on the tools of a giant corporation for every step of a creative process (in this case, Amazon). Owncast and other open streaming apps are a great way to hedge your bets while maybe opening up a new audience.

    #Stirling_PDF is a one-stop #PDF editing shop

    Handling and editing PDF documents has never been consistently easy. For those who don’t want to pony up for Adobe’s software or upload their files to sketchy-looking file conversion websites, Stirling PDF is the Swiss Army knife for PDF documents. Convert, edit, merge, split, sign, and more, without having to hand over your personal or sensitive files to a cloud giant. Stirling PDF also lets you self-host if you prefer to handle documents with particular sensitivity.

    Why does this matter? Frankly, any time there’s a realistic alternative to #Adobe, take it.

    https://techcrunch.com/2024/11/24/these-alternatives-to-popular-apps-can-help-reclaim-your-online-life-fro
    #alternative #alternatives #app

  • Sur Arte en ce moment, plusieurs films de Truffaut
    Je continue à aimer Truffaut, toute critique m’échappe, je fais en sorte en tout cas.

    Évidemment, chaque actrice ou acteur, je cherche les unes et les autres sur le net, ce qu’ils sont devenus

    Et Jean-Pierre Léaud ? Sache qu’en juin 2023 une cagnotte des amis de Truffaut a été ouverte pour lui même plus intermittent spectacle et sa compagne qui s’en occupe.
    https://www.telerama.fr/cinema/il-y-a-un-decalage-enorme-entre-la-notoriete-de-jean-pierre-leaud-et-sa-vie

    Voila la france de macron et des légions d’honneur distribuées à tour de bras aux pires crapules, les soutiens aux pédocriminels dans des logements du VIem arrondissement, le soutien aux comédiens accusés de viols au 20h de l’autochef lui même et tout ces petits réseaux qui tournicotent et sucent la culture française jusqu’à la tombe, cette si belle culture française qui laisse crever ses artistes de faim.

    • Quelle affaire !
      La cagnotte de 20 382,84 €récoltés sur 15 000 €
      https://www.leetchi.com/fr/c/soutien-et-reconnaissance-a-jean-pierre-leaud-1658457

      Frais
      https://www.leetchi.com/fr/tarifs

      Dépense
      OFFERTen dessous de 100 €
      6 %

      de 100 €
      à 10 000 €
      1,5 %

      au dessus de
      10 000 €
      Commission déduite à la dépense, jamais avant !

      Dépensez intégralement votre cagnotte avant la fin du 10ème mois suivant sa création.

      À partir du 1er novembre 2023, s’il reste des fonds sur votre cagnotte, des frais de tenue de compte s’appliqueront :

      au cours du 11ème mois : 10% du montant disponible
      à partir du 12ème mois : 5€/mois

      « Mettre la générosité à portée de main »

      C’est surtout généreux envers les propriétaires de la société par actions simplifiée Leetchi .

      Anglais : leech
      https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/leech

      any of numerous carnivorous or bloodsucking usually freshwater annelid worms (class Hirudinea) that have typically a flattened lanceolate segmented body with a sucker at each end

      En choissisant leur nom d’entreprise les fondateurs ont fait preuve d’humour cynique au détriment des gens dont ils allaient sucer le sang = l’argent.

      Infos légales
      https://leetchi.elevio.help/fr/articles/242-mentions-l-gales

      Leetchi est une société par actions simplifiée au capital de 4.704.489,20 euros, dont le siège social est situé au 4, rue de la Tour des Dames - 75009 Paris, immatriculée au Registre du Commerce et des Sociétés de Paris sous le numéro RCS 907 495 204.

      Hébergement du Site : Ce site est hébergé par la société Microsoft, sur les serveurs des datacenters de Microsoft Azure situés en région parisienne.

      C’est comme un impôt sur la solidarité. Je suis ébahi devant une telle #chutzpah .

      #business #sangsue #finances #Microsoft

  • Trotz Abhängigkeit und Datenschutzrisiken : Behörden gehen in die Microsoft-Cloud
    https://www.heise.de/news/Trotz-Abhaengigkeit-und-Datenschutzrisiken-Behoerden-gehen-in-die-Microsoft-Cl

    Ça y est, après Deutsche Bahn plusieurs Länder (états) allemands confient et les données des citoyens et leur traitement à Microsoft. L’Allemagne capitaliste complète sa fidélité de vassal politique des USA avec l’acceptation de la domination numérique totale. L’iinitiative de création d’un environnement de travail numérique open source pour les administrations allemandes par contre voit ses fonds coupés de moitié.

    On doit constater l’absence totale d’aspiration à une souveraineté nationale chez les responsables politiques allemands. Ils n’ont toujours pas compris que l’époque des belles bagnoles à huit cylindres big block est terminée depuis bientôt cinquante ans et qu’aujourd’hui c’est vers la Chine quil faut tourner son regard si on a envie de missions de l’espace héroïques. La machine de propagande états-unienne par contre est apparemment toujours trop puissante pour que le petit esprit de premier ministre d’un Land puisse y résister.

    Je me rappelle qu’à l’époque des groupuscules maoïstes on aimait parler d’un tigre de papier quand on évoqua la première puissance impérialiste. Ce fut une erreur collossale mais c’est d’autant plus vrai aujourd’hui. Les psys appellent comment encore le syndrome du refus d’acceptation de la réalité en tant que telle ?

    19.10.2024 von Christian Wölbert - Für Behörden galt Microsoft 365 aus Datenschutzgründen lange als tabu. Jetzt wollen sechs Bundesländer mit speziell ausgehandelten Bedingungen in die Cloud.

    Den Anfang machte Deutschlands größte Behörde: „Die Bundesagentur für Arbeit führt Microsoft Teams ein“, kündigte Stefan Latuski, der Chief Information Officer (CIO) der Bundesbehörde mit über 100.000 Angestellten, im Dezember 2023 auf LinkedIn an, garniert mit einem lachenden Emoji. Innerhalb von nur 21 Wochen und damit in „absoluter Rekordzeit“ habe man die Vorbereitungen für den Rollout getroffen.

    Peter Neuhauser, Bereichsleiter IT-Sicherheit beim internen IT-Dienstleister der Arbeitsagentur, war jedoch nicht zum Mitjubeln zumute. „Für uns ist das ein trauriger Tag, der uns unseren ohnehin nicht einfachen Job noch ein Stück schwieriger macht“, kommentierte er unter dem Beitrag.

    Der Dissens zwischen dem CIO der Arbeitsagentur und einem seiner wichtigsten Mitarbeiter steht exemplarisch für eine Diskussion, die zurzeit in vielen deutschen Ministerien und Behörden mit Leidenschaft geführt wird: Sollte auch der Staat die Clouddienste von Microsoft nutzen, die in den meisten Unternehmen längst Standard sind? Oder müssen Behörden auf Teams und Microsoft 365 verzichten, um ihre Daten besser zu schützen und ihre Abhängigkeit von dem US-Konzern nicht noch zu vergrößern?

    Eine Umfrage von c’t unter den 16 Landesregierungen zeigt nun, dass die Befürworter der Microsoft-Cloud langsam die Oberhand gewinnen: Mindestens sechs Bundesländer wollen Teams oder das komplette Cloud-Office-Paket Microsoft 365 in ihrer Verwaltung einführen.

    Der Cybersicherheitsexperte Dennis-Kenji Kipker kritisiert die Entscheidung von Bundesländern wie Niedersachsen für die Microsoft-Cloud als "geradezu fahrlässig" .

    Vorreiter unter den Bundesländern ist Niedersachsen, das die Einführung von Teams bereits im April ankündigte. Anfang August berichtete c’t zudem exklusiv, dass Bayern mit Microsoft über einen Vertrag für die Nutzung von 365 verhandelt.

    Laut den Ergebnissen der c’t-Umfrage wollen auch Nordrhein-Westfalen, Bremen, Hamburg und das Saarland in die Microsoft-Cloud. In Hamburg soll Microsoft 365 bis Jahresende an 8000 bis 10.000 Verwaltungsarbeitsplätzen „mit normalem Schutzbedarf“ verfügbar sein, erklärte ein Senatssprecher. Man arbeite zudem an Maßnahmen, die die Einführung zum Beispiel bei der Polizei und in Sozialbehörden möglich machen würden. Nordrhein-Westfalen plant für das erste Quartal 2025 eine „technische Pilotierung“ von Microsoft 365, Bremen die Einführung des Cloudpakets im Oktober 2025. Das Saarland bereitet derzeit die „abschließende Freigabe“ von Teams vor, weitere Dienste von Microsoft 365 sind „angedacht“.

    Pro ...

    Die Cloud-Befürworter argumentieren unter anderem damit, dass Microsoft sein Officepaket künftig nur noch aus der Wolke heraus anbieten wird. Nach aktueller Planung läuft im Jahr 2029 der Support für das klassische MS Office 2024 aus.

    Der niedersächsische Landes-CIO Horst Baier betont vor allem den Innovationsdruck: „Der Einsatz von automatisiert bereitgestellten Anwendungen und Ressourcen, die Unterstützung der IT-Sicherheit aus der Cloud und nicht zuletzt der Weg zur Nutzung von künstlicher Intelligenz ist zwingend“, sagte er im April. Der Eigenbetrieb der IT könne solche Anforderungen „nicht vollständig abdecken“. Langfristig seien Clouddienste zudem günstiger, prognostizierte er. „IT aus der Steckdose soll so weit wie möglich eingekauft werden.“

    ... und contra Cloud

    Aus Sicht mancher Experten ist IT aus der Microsoft-Steckdose allerdings riskant. In Sachen Cybersicherheit habe es bei dem US-Konzern nachweisbar gefährliche Mängel gegeben, sagt Dennis-Kenji Kipker, Professor für IT-Sicherheitsrecht an der Hochschule Bremen, gegenüber c’t. Er verweist bei diesem Thema auf den gestohlenen Master-Key für Microsofts Azure-Cloud, mit dem mutmaßlich chinesische Hacker unter anderem auf Exchange-Accounts von US-Behörden zugriffen. Die US-Cybersicherheitsbehörde attestierte Microsoft daraufhin eine „Kaskade vermeidbarer Fehler“.

    Zudem sei die Abhängigkeit von Microsoft wirtschaftlich nachteilig, warnt Kipker. Der US-Konzern könne seine Marktmacht mit hohen Preisen ausspielen. Nicht umsonst habe das Bundeskartellamt Microsoft vor Kurzem unter verschärfte Beobachtung gestellt. „Vor dem Hintergrund dieser Tatsachen wirkt es geradezu fahrlässig, wenn ein Flächenland wie Niedersachsen betont, in Zukunft auf ,IT aus der Steckdose‘ setzen zu wollen“, lautet das Fazit des Professors.

    Auch viele Datenschützer sehen den Schritt in die Microsoft-Cloud kritisch. Im November 2022 hatten die Datenschutzbeauftragten von Bund und Ländern festgestellt, dass ein datenschutzkonformer Einsatz der Dienste unter Microsofts damaligen Standardregeln nicht möglich ist. „Zwar wurde der Datenschutznachtrag seitdem mehrfach aktualisiert, ohne aber die Kritikpunkte ausräumen zu können“, erklärt ein Sprecher der Bundesbeauftragten für den Datenschutz.
    Spezialverträge mit Microsoft

    Mittlerweile können jedoch zumindest Großkunden bei Microsoft spezielle Datenschutzbedingungen aushandeln. Diesen Weg gingen unter anderem die Bundesagentur für Arbeit und das Land Niedersachsen. Der niedersächsische Landesdatenschutzbeauftragte hatte zuvor Bedingungen formuliert. Das Ergebnis der Verhandlungen zwischen dem Konzern und der Landesregierung betrachtet er zwar als in einigen Punkten verbesserungswürdig, aber insgesamt „akzeptabel“.

    Zu den Sonderregeln, die Niedersachsen mit Microsoft ausgehandelt hat, gehört zum Beispiel eine Zusage des Konzerns, die Daten nur auf europäischen Servern zu speichern und zu verarbeiten. Der Support soll nur aus Ländern erfolgen, aus denen Unternehmen nach aktueller Lage DSGVO-konform mit Microsoft zusammenarbeiten können.

    Auch mit eigenen technischen und organisatorischen Maßnahmen will die Verwaltung ihre Daten schützen. Als Beispiele nennt das niedersächsische Innenministerium die Deaktivierung von Diagnosedaten und Teams Analytics. Die Bundesagentur für Arbeit hat ihren Beschäftigten untersagt, Sozialdaten, also zum Beispiel Daten von Arbeitslosen, auf Teams zu verarbeiten. Die Behörde schließt jedoch nicht aus, dass sich das künftig ändert.

    Nicht alle Ministerien und Behörden konsultieren die für sie zuständige Datenschutzbehörde, bevor sie mit Microsoft verhandeln. Man sei in das Vorhaben der Landesregierung „bislang noch nicht konkret eingebunden“, sagte ein Sprecher der nordrhein-westfälischen Landesdatenschutzbeauftragten gegenüber c’t.

    Die Datenschützer haben bei dem Thema grundsätzlich wenig zu gewinnen: Zunächst einmal können sie die Behörden nicht zwingen, sie überhaupt einzubinden. Verstoßen die Behörden aus ihrer Sicht gegen Datenschutzregeln, können sie, anders als bei Unternehmen, keine Bußgelder verhängen.

    Doch nicht nur Datenschützer sehen den Schritt in die Microsoft-Cloud kritisch: Die sechs Bundesländer ärgern mit ihrer Entscheidung auch die Bundesregierung. Diese arbeitet nämlich an einer anderen Lösung für die Cloud-Zukunft: Sie will Microsoft 365 nicht direkt bei Microsoft buchen, sondern bei der SAP-Tochterfirma Delos. Diese plant, die gesamte Palette an Microsoft-Clouddiensten aus eigenen Rechenzentren anzubieten.

    Mit der Delos-Cloud will die Bundesregierung die Nachteile der Public Cloud vermeiden, bei der man sowohl Software als auch Infrastruktur bei einem Fremdanbieter bucht. Microsoft soll Delos lediglich die Software und Updates zuliefern und deshalb rechtlich gesehen keine Möglichkeit haben, auf Daten zuzugreifen. Außerdem soll Delos der Bundesregierung Zeit verschaffen, falls etwa ein wiedergewählter US-Präsident Donald Trump Deutschland mit Tech-Sanktionen erpresst. Die Cloud könne auch ohne Updates zumindest ein paar Monate lang autark weiterlaufen, verspricht Delos.

    Länder contra Scholz

    Die Delos-Cloud ist nicht nur für den Bund gedacht, sondern für die gesamte deutsche Verwaltung inklusive Ländern und Kommunen. Je mehr Behörden bestellen, desto günstiger kann es am Ende für die Einzelnen werden. Doch das Interesse der Länder an Delos ist bislang so gering, dass Bundeskanzler Olaf Scholz im Sommer bei den Ministerpräsidenten persönlich und nachdrücklich Werbung dafür machte: Er würde „einen Vertrag sofort unterschreiben“, betonte er laut Handelsblatt.

    In der Umfrage von c’t äußern die Landesregierungen sich aber weiterhin zurückhaltend zu Delos. Da die Kosten und der Leistungsumfang noch nicht bekannt seien, könne man das Angebot auch noch nicht beurteilen, hieß es mehr oder weniger wortgleich.

    Dass die Länder, die sich bereits für Microsofts Standard-Cloud entschieden haben, später auf Delos umsteigen, ist eher unwahrscheinlich. Schließlich müssen sie bei Delos für die gleichen Dienste mehr bezahlen. „Im Vergleich wird die normale, öffentliche Microsoft-Cloud günstiger sein, weil die Anforderungen der Verwaltung einen erheblichen Zusatzaufwand bedeuten“, sagte der damalige Delos-Chef Georges Welz 2023 gegenüber c’t.

    Einige Bundesländer warten noch ab. Man könne die eingesetzten On-Premise-Produkte voraussichtlich bis Oktober 2029 lizenzieren, teilte die Landesregierung von Baden-Württemberg mit. Daher sehe man „derzeit keine Notwendigkeit zur Nutzung der Microsoft-Public-Cloud-Dienste. Dieses Vorgehen unterstützt die Souveränitätsinteressen des Landes.“ Man gehe davon aus, dass bis dahin die Delos-Cloud als Alternative zur Verfügung steht. Parallel verfolge man die Entwicklung von openDesk „mit Interesse“.

    Bei openDesk handelt es sich um eine Suite aus Open-Source-Office-Apps wie Open-XChange, Nextcloud und Collabora Office. Die Entwicklung dieser Microsoft-365-Alternative koordiniert das von der Bundesregierung gegründete und finanzierte „Zentrum für Digitale Souveränität“.
    Open Source vernachlässigt
    Die Linken-Abgeordnete Anke Domscheit-Berg fordert die Bundesregierung auf, mehr Geld für die Microsoft-Office-Alternative openDesk bereitzustellen.,

    Die Linken-Abgeordnete Anke Domscheit-Berg fordert die Bundesregierung auf, mehr Geld für die Microsoft-Office-Alternative openDesk bereitzustellen .

    Auf Open Source setzen im Office-Bereich bislang nur zwei Bundesländer: Schleswig-Holstein und Thüringen. Schleswig-Holstein hat bereits den Wechsel von Microsoft Office zu LibreOffice auf den rund 30.000 Rechnern der Beschäftigten des Landes beschlossen. Außerdem eruiert die Landesregierung Anwendungen wie Nextcloud und Open-Xchange. Thüringen arbeitet zurzeit an einer Cloud-Infrastruktur „als Basis für Dienste wie openDesk, Nextcloud, OpenTalk usw.“, wie ein Regierungssprecher mitteilte.

    Insgesamt ist das Interesse an Open Source in der Politik also eher gering. „Vielleicht wäre das Bild heute ein Anderes, hätte der Bund nicht die Entwicklung von openDesk in den letzten Jahren so ausgebremst“, sagt Anke Domscheit-Berg, die Digitalexpertin der Linken im Bundestag. Sie verweist darauf, dass die Bundesregierung die Mittel für das Zentrum für Digitale Souveränität von 50 Millionen Euro im Jahr 2023 auf unter 25 Millionen Euro im laufenden Jahr gekürzt habe. „Und im nächsten Jahr sollen sie sogar auf unter 3 Millionen Euro gekürzt werden.“

    Gleichzeitig verschleppe der Bund die Aufnahme von Bundesländern in den Gesellschafterkreis des Zentrums, kritisiert Domscheit-Berg. „Das sind verhängnisvolle strategische Fehler, deren Nachwirkungen wir noch lange bei der Informationssicherheit und bei der Höhe der Ausgaben für proprietäre Software-Lizenzen spüren werden.“

    Papiertiger
    https://de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papiertiger

    Der Begriff beruht auf dem chinesischen Ausdruck 紙老虎 (zhǐlǎohǔ), der wiederum ein Kompositum aus 纸 (zhǐ) ‚Papier‘ und 老虎 (lǎohǔ) ‚Tiger‘ ist. Seit dem 19. Jahrhundert ist er als Lehnwort auch in europäischen Sprachen nachgewiesen. So übersetzte Robert Morrison die Phrase 1828 mit “a paper tiger” ins Englische. Auch John Francis Davis übersetzte 1836 in einem Buch über chinesische Geschichte die Phrase mit “paper tiger”] dies wurde 1848 als „Papiertiger“ auch in die deutsche Übersetzung des Buches übernommen. Ab etwa 1838 findet sich der Begriff häufig auch in deutschsprachigen Quellen.

    Häufig gebraucht hat diesen Begriff Mao Zedong, der Vorsitzende der Kommunistischen Partei Chinas. In dem Buch Worte des Vorsitzenden Mao Tsetung wird der Papiertiger folgendermaßen erwähnt: „Der Imperialismus und alle Reaktionäre sind Papiertiger.“ (一切反动派都是纸老虎. Yīqiè fǎndòngpài doū shì zhǐ lǎohǔ.)

    #Allemagne #Microsoft #open-source #administration #politique

  • Microsoft will let people buy games in Xbox Android app in November
    https://www.cnbc.com/2024/10/10/microsoft-will-let-people-buy-games-in-xbox-android-app-in-november.html

    Microsoft will allow people to buy and play video games through its Xbox app for Android starting in November, the company said on Thursday.

    The move is an immediate consequence of a U.S. judge ruling on Monday that Google will have to present alternatives to its Google Play app store on Android devices.

    #jeux_vidéo #jeu_vidéo #business #boutique #google_play #epic_games #microsoft #google #android #mobile

  • Google mächtiger als die EU

    via https://diasp.eu/p/17142107

    22.09.2024

    Google trickst EU Kommission aus

    Der „Wert“ der #BIG5 oder #GAFAM (#Google, #Amazon, #Facebook, #Apple, #Microsoft) ist größer als die Haushalte von vielen Staaten. Auch die EU mit 350 Millionen Einwohnern ist nicht mehr in der Lage die Konzerne in die Schranken zu weisen.

    Seit Jahren geht die Wettbewerbsbehörde der EU mit Milliarden #Bußgelder|n gegen Google vor - auch gegen Meta (Facebook). Nun hat aktuell der EuG, das Gericht der #EU [#UE], die von der EU-Kommission gegen ­Google verhängte Geldstrafe in Höhe von 1,49 Milliarden Euro kassiert. Die EU hatte festgestellt, dass der Onlinekonzern, bei seinem Dienst „Adsense for Search“ die eigene marktbeherrschende Stellung missbraucht hatte.

    Bei diesem Google-Dienst können die Betreiber anderer Internetseiten für einen (...)

    • https://www.npr.org/2024/09/20/nx-s1-5120581/three-mile-island-nuclear-power-plant-microsoft-ai

      Three Mile Island, the power plant near Middletown, Pa., that was the scene of the worst commercial nuclear accident in U.S. history, will reopen to power #Microsoft's #data_centers, which are responsible for powering the tech giant’s cloud computing and artificial intelligence programs.

      Constellation #Energy, which bills itself as America’s largest producer of “clean, #carbon-free energy,” announced Friday that it had signed its largest-ever power purchase agreement with Microsoft.

      “Powering industries critical to our nation’s global economic and technological competitiveness, including data centers, requires an abundance of energy that is carbon-free and reliable every hour of every day, and #nuclear_plants are the only energy sources that can consistently deliver on that promise,” said Joe Dominguez, Constellation Energy’s president and CEO.

      The deal will create approximately 3,400 jobs and bring in more than $3 billion in state and federal taxes, according to the company. It also said the agreement will add $16 billion to Pennsylvania’s GDP.

      The agreement will span 20 years, and the plant is expected to reopen in 2028. It will be renamed the Crane Clean Energy Center in honor of Chris Crane, who died in April and served as the CEO of Constellation’s former parent company.

      #Pennsylvania’s nuclear energy industry plays a critical role in providing safe, #reliable, #carbon_free #electricity that helps reduce emissions and grow Pennsylvania’s economy,” Gov. Josh Shapiro said.

      Unlike power plants using fossil fuels, like coal or natural gas, nuclear plants do not directly release carbon dioxide or other greenhouse gas emissions driving global warming.

      The partial nuclear reactor meltdown at Three Mile Island happened on March 28, 1979, when one of the plant’s two reactors’ cooling mechanisms malfunctioned. The #reactor that will be reopened to power Microsoft’s data centers was not involved in the accident.

      #AI #IA
      #Intelligence_artificielle #Consommation_énergétique

    • “Before it was prematurely shuttered due to poor economics, this plant was among the safest and most reliable nuclear plants on the grid, and we look forward to bringing it back with a new name and a renewed mission to serve as an economic engine for Pennsylvania," Dominguez said.

      Ben tiens. Il a juste une conception des générateurs de vapeur foireuse qui fait qu’en cas de brèche sur le circuit primaire ils se vident en quelques dizaines de secondes, privant le dit circuit d’une source d’évacuation de l’énergie. Précisément un des problèmes lors de l’accident.

  • Les émissions des datacenters de Google, Microsoft, Meta et Apple seraient 662 % plus élevées que ce que les Big Tech ont officiellement déclaré.
    https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7242436765972586496

    Les émissions des datacenters de Google, Microsoft, Meta et Apple seraient 662 % plus élevées que ce que les Big Tech ont officiellement déclaré.

    C’est ce que révèle une enquête inédite du Guardian, menée entre 2020 et 2022, mettant à jour un vrai système de brigand climatique, derrière des allégations trompeuses de « neutralité carbone ». Ce qu’il faut en retenir :

    – La méthode : Une dissimulation d’une telle ampleur a été rendue possible grâce à un système bien huilé de « comptabilité créative » à base d’achat de certificats d’énergie renouvelable, ou « Recs ». En (très) gros : du blanchiment d’argent version facture d’énergie.

    – L’ampleur : Toutes les entreprises sont coupables de dissimulation à grande échelle, avec une mention spéciale pour Meta. En 2022, les émissions officielles de Meta provenant de ses datacenters n’étaient que de 273 tonnes de CO2. Mais en étudiant ses « émissions localisées » , le Guardian obtient le chiffre de 3,8 millions de tonnes. Sacrée différence.

    – La cause : Le boom de l’IA, beaucoup plus gourmand en énergie pour les datacenters que les applications classiques basées sur le cloud. Selon Goldman Sachs (qu’on ne peut pas taxer de technophobie), le traitement d’une requête ChatGPT nécessite près de 10 fois plus d’électricité qu’une recherche Google, et la demande d’électricité des datacenters devrait augrmenter de 160 % d’ici 2030. Une étude de Morgan Stanley, un concurrent direct de Goldman Sachs, a abouti à des conclusions similaires, prévoyant que les émissions des datacenters s’élèveront à 2,5 milliards de tonnes d’équivalent CO2 d’ici 2030.

    Et ce n’est peut-être que la partie émergée de l’iceberg : l’enquête du Guardian s’est limitée aux émissions produites entre 2020 et 2022, une période qui correspond au début de l’essor de l’IA, mais pas aux sommets qu’elle a atteints aujourd’hui. Aujourd’hui, les Big Tech sont engagées dans un greenwashing de vaste ampleur, et l’intervention de Mère Nature lors des keynote d’Apple n’y changera rien.

    Note : Amazon, de loin le plus gros émetteur, n’a pas pu être inclus dans l’enquête du Guardian car son business model rend trop opaque l’isolement de ses émissions. Elle est pourtant tout aussi coupable que les autres de dissimuler son impact réel sur l’environnement.

    #Datacenter #Intelligence_artificielle #Consommation_énergétique

  • #Data_center emissions probably 662% higher than big tech claims. Can it keep up the ruse?

    Emissions from in-house data centers of #Google, #Microsoft, #Meta and #Apple may be 7.62 times higher than official tally.

    Big tech has made some big claims about greenhouse gas emissions in recent years. But as the rise of artificial intelligence creates ever bigger energy demands, it’s getting hard for the industry to hide the true costs of the data centers powering the tech revolution.

    According to a Guardian analysis, from 2020 to 2022 the real emissions from the “in-house” or company-owned data centers of Google, Microsoft, Meta and Apple are probably about 662% – or 7.62 times – higher than officially reported.

    Amazon is the largest emitter of the big five tech companies by a mile – the emissions of the second-largest emitter, Apple, were less than half of Amazon’s in 2022. However, Amazon has been kept out of the calculation above because its differing business model makes it difficult to isolate data center-specific emissions figures for the company.

    As energy demands for these data centers grow, many are worried that carbon emissions will, too. The International Energy Agency stated that data centers already accounted for 1% to 1.5% of global electricity consumption in 2022 – and that was before the AI boom began with ChatGPT’s launch at the end of that year.

    AI is far more energy-intensive on data centers than typical cloud-based applications. According to Goldman Sachs, a ChatGPT query needs nearly 10 times as much electricity to process as a Google search, and data center power demand will grow 160% by 2030. Goldman competitor Morgan Stanley’s research has made similar findings, projecting data center emissions globally to accumulate to 2.5bn metric tons of CO2 equivalent by 2030.

    In the meantime, all five tech companies have claimed carbon neutrality, though Google dropped the label last year as it stepped up its carbon accounting standards. Amazon is the most recent company to do so, claiming in July that it met its goal seven years early, and that it had implemented a gross emissions cut of 3%.

    “It’s down to creative accounting,” explained a representative from Amazon Employees for Climate Justice, an advocacy group composed of current Amazon employees who are dissatisfied with their employer’s action on climate. “Amazon – despite all the PR and propaganda that you’re seeing about their solar farms, about their electric vans – is expanding its fossil fuel use, whether it’s in data centers or whether it’s in diesel trucks.”
    A misguided metric

    The most important tools in this “creative accounting” when it comes to data centers are renewable energy certificates, or Recs. These are certificates that a company purchases to show it is buying renewable energy-generated electricity to match a portion of its electricity consumption – the catch, though, is that the renewable energy in question doesn’t need to be consumed by a company’s facilities. Rather, the site of production can be anywhere from one town over to an ocean away.

    Recs are used to calculate “market-based” emissions, or the official emissions figures used by the firms. When Recs and offsets are left out of the equation, we get “location-based emissions” – the actual emissions generated from the area where the data is being processed.

    The trend in those emissions is worrying. If these five companies were one country, the sum of their “location-based” emissions in 2022 would rank them as the 33rd highest-emitting country, behind the Philippines and above Algeria.

    Many data center industry experts also recognize that location-based metrics are more honest than the official, market-based numbers reported.

    “Location-based [accounting] gives an accurate picture of the emissions associated with the energy that’s actually being consumed to run the data center. And Uptime’s view is that it’s the right metric,” said Jay Dietrich, the research director of sustainability at Uptime Institute, a leading data center advisory and research organization.

    Nevertheless, Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Protocol, a carbon accounting oversight body, allows Recs to be used in official reporting, though the extent to which they should be allowed remains controversial between tech companies and has led to a lobbying battle over GHG Protocol’s rule-making process between two factions.

    On one side there is the Emissions First Partnership, spearheaded by Amazon and Meta. It aims to keep Recs in the accounting process regardless of their geographic origins. In practice, this is only a slightly looser interpretation of what GHG Protocol already permits.

    The opposing faction, headed by Google and Microsoft, argues that there needs to be time-based and location-based matching of renewable production and energy consumption for data centers. Google calls this its 24/7 goal, or its goal to have all of its facilities run on renewable energy 24 hours a day, seven days a week by 2030. Microsoft calls it its 100/100/0 goal, or its goal to have all its facilities running on 100% carbon-free energy 100% of the time, making zero carbon-based energy purchases by 2030.

    Google has already phased out its Rec use and Microsoft aims to do the same with low-quality “unbundled” (non location-specific) Recs by 2030.

    Academics and carbon management industry leaders alike are also against the GHG Protocol’s permissiveness on Recs. In an open letter from 2015, more than 50 such individuals argued that “it should be a bedrock principle of GHG accounting that no company be allowed to report a reduction in its GHG footprint for an action that results in no change in overall GHG emissions. Yet this is precisely what can happen under the guidance given the contractual/Rec-based reporting method.”

    To GHG Protocol’s credit, the organization does ask companies to report location-based figures alongside their Rec-based figures. Despite that, no company includes both location-based and market-based metrics for all three subcategories of emissions in the bodies of their annual environmental reports.

    In fact, location-based numbers are only directly reported (that is, not hidden in third-party assurance statements or in footnotes) by two companies – Google and Meta. And those two firms only include those figures for one subtype of emissions: scope 2, or the indirect emissions companies cause by purchasing energy from utilities and large-scale generators.
    In-house data centers

    Scope 2 is the category that includes the majority of the emissions that come from in-house data center operations, as it concerns the emissions associated with purchased energy – mainly, electricity.

    Data centers should also make up a majority of overall scope 2 emissions for each company except Amazon, given that the other sources of scope 2 emissions for these companies stem from the electricity consumed by firms’ offices and retail spaces – operations that are relatively small and not carbon-intensive. Amazon has one other carbon-intensive business vertical to account for in its scope 2 emissions: its warehouses and e-commerce logistics.

    For the firms that give data center-specific data – Meta and Microsoft – this holds true: data centers made up 100% of Meta’s market-based (official) scope 2 emissions and 97.4% of its location-based emissions. For Microsoft, those numbers were 97.4% and 95.6%, respectively.

    The huge differences in location-based and official scope 2 emissions numbers showcase just how carbon intensive data centers really are, and how deceptive firms’ official emissions numbers can be. Meta, for example, reports its official scope 2 emissions for 2022 as 273 metric tons CO2 equivalent – all of that attributable to data centers. Under the location-based accounting system, that number jumps to more than 3.8m metric tons of CO2 equivalent for data centers alone – a more than 19,000 times increase.

    A similar result can be seen with Microsoft. The firm reported its official data center-related emissions for 2022 as 280,782 metric tons CO2 equivalent. Under a location-based accounting method, that number jumps to 6.1m metric tons CO2 equivalent. That’s a nearly 22 times increase.

    While Meta’s reporting gap is more egregious, both firms’ location-based emissions are higher because they undercount their data center emissions specifically, with 97.4% of the gap between Meta’s location-based and official scope 2 number in 2022 being unreported data center-related emissions, and 95.55% of Microsoft’s.

    Specific data center-related emissions numbers aren’t available for the rest of the firms. However, given that Google and Apple have similar scope 2 business models to Meta and Microsoft, it is likely that the multiple on how much higher their location-based data center emissions are would be similar to the multiple on how much higher their overall location-based scope 2 emissions are.

    In total, the sum of location-based emissions in this category between 2020 and 2022 was at least 275% higher (or 3.75 times) than the sum of their official figures. Amazon did not provide the Guardian with location-based scope 2 figures for 2020 and 2021, so its official (and probably much lower) numbers were used for this calculation for those years.
    Third-party data centers

    Big tech companies also rent a large portion of their data center capacity from third-party data center operators (or “colocation” data centers). According to the Synergy Research Group, large tech companies (or “hyperscalers”) represented 37% of worldwide data center capacity in 2022, with half of that capacity coming through third-party contracts. While this group includes companies other than Google, Amazon, Meta, Microsoft and Apple, it gives an idea of the extent of these firms’ activities with third-party data centers.

    Those emissions should theoretically fall under scope 3, all emissions a firm is responsible for that can’t be attributed to the fuel or electricity it consumes.

    When it comes to a big tech firm’s operations, this would encapsulate everything from the manufacturing processes of the hardware it sells (like the iPhone or Kindle) to the emissions from employees’ cars during their commutes to the office.

    When it comes to data centers, scope 3 emissions include the carbon emitted from the construction of in-house data centers, as well as the carbon emitted during the manufacturing process of the equipment used inside those in-house data centers. It may also include those emissions as well as the electricity-related emissions of third-party data centers that are partnered with.

    However, whether or not these emissions are fully included in reports is almost impossible to prove. “Scope 3 emissions are hugely uncertain,” said Dietrich. “This area is a mess just in terms of accounting.”

    According to Dietrich, some third-party data center operators put their energy-related emissions in their own scope 2 reporting, so those who rent from them can put those emissions into their scope 3. Other third-party data center operators put energy-related emissions into their scope 3 emissions, expecting their tenants to report those emissions in their own scope 2 reporting.

    Additionally, all firms use market-based metrics for these scope 3 numbers, which means third-party data center emissions are also undercounted in official figures.

    Of the firms that report their location-based scope 3 emissions in the footnotes, only Apple has a large gap between its official scope 3 figure and its location-based scope 3 figure.

    This is the only sizable reporting gap for a firm that is not data center-related – the majority of Apple’s scope 3 gap is due to Recs being applied towards emissions associated with the manufacturing of hardware (such as the iPhone).

    Apple does not include transmission and distribution losses or third-party cloud contracts in its location-based scope 3. It only includes those figures in its market-based numbers, under which its third party cloud contracts report zero emissions (offset by Recs). Therefore in both of Apple’s total emissions figures – location-based and market-based – the actual emissions associated with their third party data center contracts are nowhere to be found.”

    .
    2025 and beyond

    Even though big tech hides these emissions, they are due to keep rising. Data centers’ electricity demand is projected to double by 2030 due to the additional load that artificial intelligence poses, according to the Electric Power Research Institute.

    Google and Microsoft both blamed AI for their recent upticks in market-based emissions.

    “The relative contribution of AI computing loads to Google’s data centers, as I understood it when I left [in 2022], was relatively modest,” said Chris Taylor, current CEO of utility storage firm Gridstor and former site lead for Google’s data center energy strategy unit. “Two years ago, [AI] was not the main thing that we were worried about, at least on the energy team.”

    Taylor explained that most of the growth that he saw in data centers while at Google was attributable to growth in Google Cloud, as most enterprises were moving their IT tasks to the firm’s cloud servers.

    Whether today’s power grids can withstand the growing energy demands of AI is uncertain. One industry leader – Marc Ganzi, the CEO of DigitalBridge, a private equity firm that owns two of the world’s largest third-party data center operators – has gone as far as to say that the data center sector may run out of power within the next two years.

    And as grid interconnection backlogs continue to pile up worldwide, it may be nearly impossible for even the most well intentioned of companies to get new renewable energy production capacity online in time to meet that demand.

    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2024/sep/15/data-center-gas-emissions-tech
    #données #émissions #mensonge #ChatGPT #AI #IA #intelligence_artificielle #CO2 #émissions_de_CO2 #centre_de_données

    • AI’s emissions are about to skyrocket even further

      Data center emissions have tripled since 2018. As more complex AI models like OpenAI’s Sora see broad release, those figures will likely go through the roof.

      It’s no secret that the current AI boom is using up immense amounts of energy. Now we have a better idea of how much.

      A new paper, from teams at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, examined 2,132 data centers operating in the United States (78% of all facilities in the country). These facilities—essentially buildings filled to the brim with rows of servers—are where AI models get trained, and they also get “pinged” every time we send a request through models like ChatGPT. They require huge amounts of energy both to power the servers and to keep them cool.

      Since 2018, carbon emissions from data centers in the US have tripled. For the 12 months ending August 2024, data centers were responsible for 105 million metric tons of CO2, accounting for 2.18% of national emissions (for comparison, domestic commercial airlines are responsible for about 131 million metric tons). About 4.59% of all the energy used in the US goes toward data centers, a figure that’s doubled since 2018.

      It’s difficult to put a number on how much AI in particular, which has been booming since ChatGPT launched in November 2022, is responsible for this surge. That’s because data centers process lots of different types of data—in addition to training or pinging AI models, they do everything from hosting websites to storing your photos in the cloud. However, the researchers say, AI’s share is certainly growing rapidly as nearly every segment of the economy attempts to adopt the technology.

      “It’s a pretty big surge,” says Eric Gimon, a senior fellow at the think tank Energy Innovation, who was not involved in the research. “There’s a lot of breathless analysis about how quickly this exponential growth could go. But it’s still early days for the business in terms of figuring out efficiencies, or different kinds of chips.”

      Notably, the sources for all this power are particularly “dirty.” Since so many data centers are located in coal-producing regions, like Virginia, the “carbon intensity” of the energy they use is 48% higher than the national average. The paper, which was published on arXiv and has not yet been peer-reviewed, found that 95% of data centers in the US are built in places with sources of electricity that are dirtier than the national average.

      There are causes other than simply being located in coal country, says Falco Bargagli-Stoffi, an author of the paper and Assistant Professor at UCLA Fielding School of Public Health. “Dirtier energy is available throughout the entire day,” he says, and plenty of data centers require that to maintain peak operation 24-7. “Renewable energy, like wind or solar, might not be as available.” Political or tax incentives, and local pushback, can also affect where data centers get built.

      One key shift in AI right now means that the field’s emissions are soon likely to skyrocket. AI models are rapidly moving from fairly simple text generators like ChatGPT toward highly complex image, video, and music generators. Until now, many of these “multimodal” models have been stuck in the research phase, but that’s changing.

      OpenAI released its video generation model Sora to the public on December 9, and its website has been so flooded with traffic from people eager to test it out that it is still not functioning properly. Competing models, like Veo from Google and Movie Gen from Meta, have still not been released publicly, but if those companies follow OpenAI’s lead as they have in the past, they might be soon. Music generation models from Suno and Udio are growing (despite lawsuits), and Nvidia released its own audio generator last month. Google is working on its Astra project, which will be a video-AI companion that can converse with you about your surroundings in real time.

      “As we scale up to images and video, the data sizes increase exponentially,” says Gianluca Guidi, a PhD student in artificial intelligence at University of Pisa and IMT Lucca and visiting researcher at Harvard, who is the paper’s lead author. Combine that with wider adoption, he says, and emissions will soon jump.

      One of the goals of the researchers was to build a more reliable way to get snapshots of just how much energy data centers are using. That’s been a more complicated task than you might expect, given that the data is dispersed across a number of sources and agencies. They’ve now built a portal that shows data center emissions across the country. The long-term goal of the data pipeline is to inform future regulatory efforts to curb emissions from data centers, which are predicted to grow enormously in the coming years.

      “There’s going to be increased pressure, between the environmental and sustainability-conscious community and Big Tech,” says Francesca Dominici, director of the Harvard Data Science Initiative, Harvard Professor and another coauthor. “But my prediction is that there is not going to be regulation. Not in the next four years.”

      https://www.technologyreview.com/2024/12/13/1108719/ais-emissions-are-about-to-skyrocket-even-further

  • Microsoft’s Recall Feature on Windows 11 Not Removable After All
    https://digitalmarketreports.com/news/25091/microsoft-recall-feature-on-windows-11-not-removable-after-all

    Microsoft has confirmed that Windows 11 users will not be able to uninstall the controversial “Recall” feature, despite earlier reports suggesting otherwise. Recall, part of the Copilot+ suite announced in May, automatically captures screenshots of user activity on the operating system, ostensibly to help users easily retrieve past work.

    Oui, ils se foutent de not’gueule quand ils disent qu’ils nous ont entendu et que bon, ok, on va supprimer nos fonctionnalités attentatoires à la sécurité et à la vie privée.

  • August Windows Update Breaks Linux Dual-Boots
    https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/08/windows-update-breaking-linux-dualboot-fix

    I haven’t booted into the Windows partition on my Chuwi laptop for a while, but hearing that a recent Windows update leaves dual boot users unable to boot Linux at all, I’m glad I haven’t! #Microsoft’s mid-August drop of #security updates to Windows 10 and Windows 11 includes a security patch to address an exploit targeting GRUB2 Secure Boot bypassing. The Secure Boot Advanced Targeting (SBAT) update nixes the vulnerability by preventing ‘old, vulnerable boot managers’ from being able to boot. Prior to release, Microsoft said this update would not be applied to systems where an active dual-boot was detected, […] You’re reading August Windows Update Breaks Linux Dual-Boots, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without (...)

    #News #GRUB

  • More academic publishers are doing AI deals

    A week after #Taylor_&_Francis sold authors’ work to #Microsoft AI for $10 million without asking or paying them, the Bookseller surveyed other academic publishers to see if they were cutting similar deals in the name of “AI research.” And, of course, they are. [The Bookseller, archive]

    #Wiley and #Oxford_University_Press confirmed AI partnerships. But they’re in completely noble causes! (And a big bag of cash.)

    Wiley said “it is in the public interest for these emerging technologies to be trained on high-quality, reliable information.” Oxford University Press wants to “champion the vital role that researchers have in an AI-enabled world.”

    Cambridge University Press said it’s talking to authors before making deals, so that’s nice.

    Pearson declined to comment. But CEO Omar Abbosh has called AI “an important driver of growth.” So have a guess. [The Bookseller, archive]

    Pan Macmillan, Hachette, and HarperCollins confirmed that they have not yet poured authors’ work into the AI shredders.

    Some publishers promise authors opt-ins and remuneration. But we suspect that feeding academic work to AI will not go so well. It likely means a loss of citations — authors won’t get credited — and original work will get taken out of context or otherwise mangled, because LLMs process words the way a blender processes food.

    https://pivot-to-ai.com/2024/08/04/more-academic-publishers-are-doing-ai-deals
    #édition_scientifique #AI #IA #intelligence_artificielle #recherche #ESR #Cambridge_University_Press #droits_d'auteur

  • World of Warcraft developers form Blizzard’s largest and most inclusive union - The Verge
    https://www.theverge.com/2024/7/24/24205366/world-of-warcraft-developers-form-union-blizzard-entertainment

    More than 500 developers at Blizzard Entertainment who work on World of Warcraft have voted to form a union. The World of Warcraft GameMakers Guild, formed with the assistance of the Communication Workers of America (CWA), is composed of employees across every department, including designers, engineers, artists, producers, and more. Together, they have formed the largest wall-to-wall union — or a union inclusive of multiple departments and disciplines — at Microsoft.

    #jeu_vidéo #jeux_vidéo #activision_blizzard #microsoft #syndicalisme #syndicat #cwa

  • Big Tech Consolidation Amplified the CrowdStrike Outage
    https://jacobin.com/2024/07/crowdstrike-microsoft-big-tech-consolidation

    21.7.2024 by Freddy Brewster, Lucy Dean Stockton , Katya Schwenk, Helen Santoro - On Friday, an update to a cybersecurity program took down Microsoft systems across the globe. Microsoft has resisted efforts to regulate a root cause of this chaos: the concentration of digital infrastructure in the hands of a few tech giants.

    A little more than a year before Microsoft’s systems crashed on Friday, creating global chaos in the banking, airline, and emergency service industries, the company pushed back against regulators investigating the risks of a handful of cloud services companies controlling the world’s technological infrastructure, according to documents we reviewed.

    “Regulators should carefully avoid any intervention that might disturb the competitive offerings that have promoted the explosive innovation and growth attributable to the cloud,” the company wrote in response to the Federal Trade Commission’s 2023 review of cloud computing companies’ security practices and interoperability protocols.

    The agency questioned whether these companies “invest sufficient resources in research and development” of systems upon which the economy and government rely.

    Microsoft is blaming this week’s global cloud outages on an update from CrowdStrike, a cybersecurity firm whose software protects against hacks. The debacle comes two days after federal agencies released new guidance sounding additional alarms that Big Tech’s consolidation of cloud services could put consumers at serious risk. It also comes one day after Microsoft’s cloud services experienced a separate outage in certain parts of the United States.

    “This is a CrowdStrike-caused outage. It would be inaccurate to report this as a Microsoft outage,” the company said in a statement. “A CrowdStrike update was responsible for bringing down a number of IT systems globally. We are actively supporting customers to assist in their recovery.”

    CrowdStrike did not respond to a request for comment.

    “All too often these days, a single glitch results in a system-wide outage, affecting industries from healthcare and airlines to banks and auto-dealers,” posted Lina Khan, Federal Trade Commission chairwoman, whose agency spearheaded the probe of the cloud computing industry. “Millions of people and businesses pay the price. These incidents reveal how concentration can create fragile systems.”

    At the root of the problem, regulators and researchers say, is Big Tech’s consolidation of cloud services, a technology that allows consumers to store computer information in massive data centers rather than storing it on-site. Just three companies — Amazon, Microsoft, and Google — control 65 percent of the cloud market, according to a report released on July 18 by CloudZero, a cost management platform.

    Microsoft and CrowdStrike also dominate the end point security market, which ensures cybersecurity for devices like desktops, laptops, and mobile devices. As of 2022, the two companies controlled more than 30 percent of the market.

    This consolidation helped allow a simple error to spiral on Friday.

    “We had this cascading failure of all of these businesses, banks, the London Stock Exchange, all of these airlines had to be grounded, because of this one mistake,” said Zane Griffin Talley Cooper, a researcher at the University of Pennsylvania studying digital infrastructure. “And it’s because the internet has become so centralized in the hands of four or five big companies.”

    “With that model, catastrophic failures like this are going to be increasingly common,” he added.
    Regulatory Scrutiny Intensifies

    In March 2023, the Federal Trade Commission announced a wide-ranging survey of the business practices of cloud providers. The agency looked at “market power, business practices affecting competition, and potential security risks,” soliciting comments from companies and the public.

    In its response to the Federal Trade Commission’s probe, Microsoft claimed the marketplace for cloud services remains robust, and warned that regulations may affect “billions of dollars” in investments.

    The company also suggested that the Federal Trade Commission’s intervention would “run the risk of impacting the quality of these solutions and the pace of innovation, and ultimately disadvantaging American companies on the global stage,” Microsoft wrote.

    Public Citizen, a consumer advocacy nonprofit, warned the Federal Trade Commission in 2023 that the market dominance of Amazon, Microsoft, and Google over the cloud services sector is a threat to the economy.

    “Single point dependency on a cloud provider is a structural weakness for the entire economy with the potential to cause more consumer harm in the future,” the group wrote in June 2023.

    On Wednesday — just two days before the global outage — the Department of the Treasury, along with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and other federal agencies, cautioned that the industry’s deep reliance on a small handful of cloud service providers left it vulnerable to widespread outages and disruptions.

    The Treasury also released a suite of guidance for banks and financial institutions, following its report from last February that raised an alarm about the potential risks of the highly consolidated market. The report advised that a failure like the one on Friday “could impact multiple financial institutions or U.S. consumers,” and recommended additional oversight, like inspecting third-party service providers.

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s chief, Rohit Chopra, said on Friday that the failures are just a glimpse of the havoc that could be wreaked by this kind of outage in the financial sector. His agency has warned that in the future, such events could further “freeze parts of the payments infrastructure or grind other critical services to a halt.”

    “There are just a handful of big cloud companies where so much of the economy is now resting on,” Chopra said on CNBC. “We’re getting a taste of some of the potential effects of a real reliance of sectors across the economy relying on a handful of cloud companies and other key systems.”

    Friday’s outage was just a preview, he said, of what could go wrong in extreme cases of corporate consolidation and deregulation.

    “Break Up This Cloud Consortium”

    First reports of the outage surfaced early Friday morning, as computers running on Microsoft’s Windows operating system went down all at once. The issue traced back to a system update that was pushed by a company called CrowdStrike, a cybersecurity provider that is used to protect against hackers in a wide range of sectors, from airlines to banking — and was previously known for its involvement in the 2016 investigation into Russia’s hack of the Democratic National Committee.

    CrowdStrike quickly said it had identified the problem with the update and began pushing a solution, but added that the fixes could take hours.

    “We are aware of this issue and are working closely with CrowdStrike and across the industry to provide customers technical guidance and support to safely bring their systems back online,” Satya Nadella, Microsoft’s CEO, posted on X.

    Microsoft, which was one of the early pioneers of cloud computing software, controls a staggering 85 percent of federal productivity software, and even more of its operating system.

    Yet the Big Tech giant has a history of pushing back against cybersecurity measures. In 2016, the Federal Reserve, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation released a joint rulemaking notice regarding the need for increased regulations on “enhanced cyber risk management standards for large and interconnected entities.”

    The proposed rule would have “significant consequences not only for the financial services industry but also for third-parties like Microsoft,” the company wrote in a comment letter. It also raised concerns about the new rules, and added that cloud service providers offer better service and cybersecurity than traditional on-site storage centers.

    The rule was withdrawn in March 2019.

    Agencies and Congress have repeatedly tried and failed to strengthen cybersecurity regulations. Within the past three years, lawmakers have introduced at least four legislative initiatives to address these concerns, though none have been adopted so far.

    This February, the federal Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency also announced it was renewing a task force charged with managing risks to the global information and communications technology supply chain, crucial for protecting computer hardware, software, and applications.

    The companies themselves were seemingly aware of the potential threat caused by an overreliance on cloud-based systems.

    In a 2023 comment letter to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau about a proposed rulemaking to tighten personal data restrictions, CrowdStrike — the cybersecurity company responsible for Friday’s data breach — argued that the biggest risk to cybersecurity was not software supply chain issues, but hackers.

    “It is our view that perhaps the most significant threat to data comes from bad actors operating unlawfully, leading to data breaches, cyberattacks, exploits, ransomware attacks and other exposure of consumer data,” CrowdStrike wrote.

    CrowdStrike echoed their concerns about the dangers of hackers and resulting system failures in their most recent annual 10-K report. The company told investors that the “consolidation of siloed products” was a concern because “integrating and maintaining numerous products, data and infrastructures across highly distributed enterprise environments” created “blind spots that hackers can exploit.”

    Microsoft, in its 2023 annual report to shareholders, also expressed that “providing [their] customers with more services and solutions in the cloud puts a premium on the resilience of [their] systems.”

    But the companies have worked hard to keep regulators from taking steps to address these risks.

    Microsoft is one of the country’s top spenders on lobbying, ranking in the top one hundred of corporations. So far this year, the company spent more than $5 million on campaign donations and lobbying lawmakers and regulators. Microsoft lobbied Congress, the Federal Trade Commission, the Treasury Department, the Executive Office of the White House, and other regulators on “policy issues in cloud computing,” among other issues, disclosures show.

    “What we really need,” said Cooper, the University of Pennsylvania researcher, “is regulators to break up this cloud consortium of four or five companies and help distribute management of the internet backbone through a host of different companies.”

    Contributors

    Freddy Brewster is a freelance reporter and has been published in the Los Angeles Times, NBC News, CalMatters, the Lost Coast Outpost, and other outlets across California.

    Lucy Dean Stockton is the news editor at the Lever.

    Katya Schwenk is a journalist based in Phoenix, Arizona.

    Helen Santoro is a journalist based in Colorado.

    #capitalisme #informatique #internet #nuage #sécutité #GAFAM #cloud_computimg #monopoles #Microsoft #Amazon #Google

  • Firmenkunden verärgert : Microsoft stellt Office-365-Konnektoren für Teams ein
    https://www.heise.de/news/Workflow-unterbrochen-Microsoft-stellt-Office-365-Konnektoren-fuer-Teams-ein-9

    Voilà pourquoi je suis heureux d’avoir réduit à quasiment zéro ma consommation de drogues produites à Redmond, Washington. J’ai commencé ma désintoxication il y a 25 ans. Depuis les crises répétées comme celle décrite dans l’article ont renforcé mes défenses contre la dépendance et ses effets nocifs.

    11.7.2024 von Tilman Wittenhorst - Microsoft stellt kurzfristig die Office-365-Konnektoren für seine Kollaborationsplattform MS Teams ein und legt Kunden, die für ihre Workflows davon Gebrauch machen, den Umstieg auf das eigene Angebot Power Automate sowie die Workflows-App in MS Teams nahe. Das teilt das Unternehmen in einem Blogbeitrag mit und gibt seinen Kunden etwas mehr als zehn Wochen Zeit, ihre Abläufe umzustellen. Solche konfigurierbaren Konnektoren leiten Informationen externer Quellen als Posting in einen Chat-Kanal in Teams weiter; insbesondere Arbeitsgruppen in Firmen machen hiervon Gebrauch.
    Knappe Frist gesetzt

    In einem Beitrag des Developer-Blogs für Microsoft 365 erläutern zwei Mitarbeiter die Pläne des Unternehmens: Zunächst loben sie die zahlreichen Office-365-Konnektoren für ihre Vielseitigkeit und ihre Beliebtheit bei den Kunden – nur um dann mitzuteilen, dass die Anbindung der Konnektoren an MS Teams bereits zum 15. August 2024 unterbunden werde; ab diesem Datum könnten Kunden keine neuen Konnektoren mehr in Betrieb nehmen. Und zum 1. Oktober 2024 würden sämtliche noch vorhandenen Konnektoren in allen Cloud-Umgebungen ihren Dienst einstellen, heißt es in dem Blogbeitrag. Stattdessen sollen Kunden zur Alternative Power Automate wechseln, damit ein „reibungsloser Betrieb“ gewährleistet bleibe.

    Mit den Konnektoren ergänzen Arbeitsgruppen ihren Austausch um automatisierte Chatnachrichten, sofern sie MS Teams dafür nutzen. Verfügbare Office-365-Konnektoren binden etwa Dienste in Microsofts Azure-Cloud, einen RSS-Feed, ein Trello-Board oder ein GitHub-Repository an, und mit selbst entwickelten Webhooks lässt sich beispielsweise eine Verbindung zu einem Monitoring- oder Ticketing-System oder einer CI/CD-Pipeline herstellen. Erwünschte Informationen tauchen somit als Nachrichten in einem Chatraum auf und bündeln wichtige Informationen für einen Workflow an einem Ort.
    Low-Code-Tool als Alternative

    Als Ersatz empfehlen die Autoren des Blogbeitrags Power Automate aus der hauseigenen Power Platform. Mit dem grafisch orientierten Low-Code-Werkzeug lassen sich Workflows ohne besondere Programmierkenntnisse erstellen und dadurch externe Komponenten mit der Workflows-App in Teams verbinden. Microsoft empfiehlt laut Blogbeitrag Power Automate als „skalierbare, flexible und sichere“ Weise, Konnektoren zu verwenden. Zudem stehe hierfür bereits eine größere Auswahl an Konnektoren bereit. Auch ein Hinweis auf die Secure Future Initiative (die bereits seit 2023 läuft) verweist auf mögliche Sicherheitsbedenken der bisher genutzten Office-365-Konnektoren, auf die der Blogbeitrag jedoch nicht näher eingeht.

    Angesichts der äußerst knappen Fristen und dem harten Schnitt, mit dem Microsoft seine Kunden vor vollendete Tatsachen stellt, sind die zahlreichen Unmutsäußerungen im Diskussionsforum unter dem Blogbeitrag wenig verwunderlich. Einzelne Nutzer merken etwa an, dass eine Übergangsfrist von kaum drei Monaten (noch dazu teils in den Sommerferien) viel zu kurz sei. Außerdem verlange eine Umstellung auf Power Automate auch eine entsprechende Enterprise-Lizenz – und dazu natürlich die nötige Aufwand für die Entwickler. Ferner würden die im Blogbeitrag verlinkten Templates für Power Automate auf die Power Platform verweisen, auf die man ohne gültige Lizenz jedoch keinen Zugriff habe.
    Warnhinweis eingeblendet

    Weitere Vorwürfe in den Kommentaren lauten unter anderem, Microsoft habe aus vergangenen erzwungenen Migrationen nichts gelernt und die Fristen erneut zu kurz angesetzt. Auch nehmen manche Kunde den geplanten Schritt als „schnelles Geldmachen“ wahr, der ihnen nur Aufwand, aber keinen Nutzen bringe. Zudem sei unabsehbar, ob Power Automate überhaupt mit bestimmen Nachrichtenformaten umgehen könne, wenn ein bisher verwendeter Konnektor oder Webhook ersetzt werden müsse. Laut The Register berichten einzelne Kunden, seit Kurzem werde an jede per Webhook erzeugte Teams-Nachricht automatisch ein Warnhinweis angefügt: Darin heißt es, die Office-365-Konnektoren in Teams seien veraltet, empfehlenswert sei der Umstieg auf die Workflows-App.

    Die Anfrage der iX-Redaktion beantwortete Microsoft noch nicht. Eine etwaige Stellungnahme reichen wir an dieser Stelle nach.

    #Microsoft #marketing #wtf

  • Windows-Installation mit lokalem Konto : Microsoft blockiert populäre Umgehung
    https://www.heise.de/news/Microsoft-blockiert-weiteren-Weg-zur-Windows-Installation-mit-lokalem-Konto-97

    Il est de plus en plus difficile d’installer un système d’exploitation Windows 11 sans compte chez Mocrosoft. Voilà la solution du jour.

    Le géant de l’informatique nous dit la même chose comme ses semblables : Si tu veux te servir de ma baguette magique il ne suffit pas que tu me payes. Jeux veux que tu me donnes ton âme aussi. Sympa les gars. Le deal que le docteur Faust conclut avec le diable fut plus avantageux.

    On sait comment finit l"histoire. Sa petite copine meurt, son monde s’écroule et l’auteur du drame n’a su se tirer de l"affaire qu’en faisant intervenir le deus ex machina . Pour les utilisateurs MS par contre il n’y aura pas de sauveteur miraculeux.

    https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/visual-basic/language-reference/statements/goto-statement
    hell : FileClose(1)
    GoTo hell

    10.6.2024 von Dirk Knop - Die Installation von Windows 11 mit lokalem Konto wird zunehmend schwieriger. Microsoft hat jetzt eine populäre Umgehungsvariante blockiert.

    Viele Nutzerinnen und Nutzer wollen ihr Windows 11 nicht unter Angabe eines Online-Microsoft-Kontos, sondern mit einem lokalen Konto einrichten. Microsoft hat jedoch etwas gegen und möchte die Nutzung der Cloud-Dienste und -Konten forcieren. Nun hat der US-Konzern einen einfachen und oft genutzten Weg verrammelt, der die Nutzung eines lokalen Kontos ermöglichte. Eine andere Umgehungsvariante funktioniert jedoch immer noch.

    Der gerne und oft genutzte Weg, bei der Windows-Installation als Name des Kontos ein nicht existierendes wie „Windows“ oder „Microsoft“ und ein beliebiges (ungültiges) Passwort einzugeben, ist nicht mehr nutzbar. Anstatt des Hinweises, dass das Konto aus Sicherheitsgründen gesperrt sei und der anschließenden Möglichkeit, ein lokales Konto einzurichten, werden diejenigen, die das versuchen, einfach zurück zur Eingabe eines Kontos geleitet. Dies fiel in der vergangenen Woche Nutzern auf X (ehemals Twitter) auf.
    Funktionierende Variante zur Win-11-Installation mit lokalem Konto

    Eine Variante, um Windows 11 mit lokalem Konto zu installieren, klappt weiterhin. Dazu kappt man bei der Installation die Netzwerkverbindungen. Windows zeigt daraufhin an, dass keine Internetverbindung besteht. Die Tastenkombination Shift (Umschalten) und gleichzeitig F10 öffnet die Eingabeaufforderung von Windows. An der führt dann der Befehl oobe\bypassnro dazu, dass das Windows-Setup neu startet. Nach der erneuten Länder- und Tastatureinstellung erscheint abermals die Aufforderung, ein Konto einzurichten, allerdings mit der Option „Ich habe kein Internet“, die das Anlegen eines lokalen Kontos ermöglicht.

    Microsoft macht es somit immer schwieriger, Windows lediglich mit einem lokalen Konto und ohne Cloud-Dienste zu nutzen.

    Vor rund einem Jahr erschien etwa der Tipp in der c’t, ein ungültiges Konto anzugeben und so zum Erstellen eines lokalen Kontos zu gelangen. Der hat sich hiermit erübrigt. Glücklicherweise bleibt Interessierten aber noch ein weiterer Weg, um den Online-Konto-Zwang herumzukommen.

    P.S. J’avoue que moi aussi je me sers plutôt dans les repos des distributions Linux que de compiler mes sources. Il n’y a pas d’autre solution que de lire le code avant de le compiler soi-même si on veut être à l’abri de la surveillance par les GAFAM. Je fais confiance par fatigue et manque de temps disponible. Dans la réalité on n’échappe pas aux conditions d’existence d’espèce faustienne.

    #Microsoft #Wimdows #GAFAM #surveillance #wtf

  • #Microsoft Announce #WSL Updates, Including New Settings App
    https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/wsl-gui-settings-apps-coming-soon

    Those using Ubuntu on Windows through the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) may be interested to know that ‘significant updates’ are on the way. In a blog post to recap things discussed as the recent Microsoft BUILD event the company’s senior product manager for the Windows developer platform Craig Loewen runs though what’s coming down the pipe for WSL users. Several experimental WSL features Microsoft announced last year have started to make their way to stable/default builds. Among them, automatically releasing stored memory in WSL back to Windows. Device with limited memory will benefit most from this, but so too […] You’re reading Microsoft Announce WSL Updates, Including New Settings App, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without (...)

    #News #windows_11

  • #Microsoft Gives Its Open-Source Developer Font Major Update
    https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/05/cascadia-code-font-update-large-type-pieces

    Cascadia Code is an open-source monospaced font made by Microsoft first released in 2020 and serves as the default typeface for the official Windows Terminal app. Similar to Intel’s One Mono, JetBrains’ Mono and IBM’s Plex, Cascadia Code is an clear, legible, modern monospaced font tailored for terminal and code editing and offering a wide range of programming ligatures. Earlier this mont the font received its first update in nearly 3 years and, as per release announcement, it’s a huge one. If you’re a fan of this font and have an older version installed, or you’re just a creative into […] You’re reading Microsoft Gives Its Open-Source Developer Font Major Update, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without (...)

    #News #Fonts

  • Pourquoi C# reste aussi décrié par les libristes, et pourquoi ils ont raison ?

    – Le langage C# est normalisé ECMA, mais n’est que open-source
    – .NET Core est libre (licence MIT), mais reste sous l’EULA Microsoft... je ne sais pas comment ca se résoudrait devant un juge.
    – Le compilateur est libre (Roslyn, licence MIT).
    – Xamarin, le cross platform implementation, est privateur
    – je ne parle pas du compilateur indépendant MONO

    Donc on peut vite penser que C# et .NET sont libres, mais en vrai, ils s’adossent à des outils qui ne le sont pas. On peut tomber dans des superpositions de licences qui ne sont pas libres, juste open-sources.

    Et n’oublions pas : L’open-source, c’est la laisse que le maitre a faite tomber au sol, mais qu’il peut reprendre à tout moment.

    #microsoft #.net #csharp #dotnet #opensource

  • Microsoft: four Xbox-exclusive games are coming to PS5 and Nintendo Switch - The Verge
    https://www.theverge.com/2024/2/15/24073691/microsoft-xbox-games-ps5-nintendo-switch-exclusivity

    It’s official: Microsoft is bringing some Xbox-exclusive games to PS5 and Nintendo Switch. It’s part of a broader strategy shift inside Microsoft’s gaming business to grow games beyond just the company’s Xbox consoles.

    #jeux_vidéo #jeu_vidéo #business #microsoft #console_xbox #console_playstation #console_switch #exclusivité

  • Microsoft prepares to take Xbox everywhere - The Verge
    https://www.theverge.com/2024/2/12/24067370/microsoft-xbox-playstation-switch-games-future-hardware

    Microsoft’s Xbox business needs to get bigger. The company’s Xbox Series S and X sales still lag behind Sony’s PlayStation 5, and Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer has previously admitted its Xbox Game Pass subscriptions were slowing down, too. He admitted that in 2022, a dry year for Xbox games after Microsoft’s big exclusive Bethesda game Starfield was delayed.

    An Xbox Game Pass slowdown might be why I’m hearing that a number of Xbox exclusives are coming to consoles with which Microsoft usually competes. Sources familiar with Microsoft’s plans tell The Verge that the company is getting ready to launch a select number of Xbox games on PS5 and Nintendo Switch. Weeks of rumors suggest that Hi-Fi Rush, Sea of Thieves, and even Bethesda titles like Starfield and Indiana Jones could appear on non-Xbox platforms.

    #jeux_vidéo #jeu_vidéo #business #microsoft #console_xbox #console_playstation #console_switch #analyse #rumeur