• I dati che raccontano la guerra ai soccorsi nell’anno nero della strage di Cutro

    Nel 2023 le autorità italiane hanno classificato come operazioni di polizia e non Sar oltre mille sbarchi, per un totale di quasi 40mila persone, un quarto degli arrivi via mare. Dati inediti del Viminale descrivono la “strategia” contro le Ong e l’intento di creare l’emergenza a Lampedusa concentrando lì oltre i due terzi degli approdi.

    Nell’anno della strage di Cutro (26 febbraio 2023) le autorità italiane hanno classificato come operazioni di polizia oltre 1.000 sbarchi, per un totale di quasi 40mila persone, poco più di un quarto di tutti gli arrivi via mare. Questo nonostante gli effetti funesti che la confusione tra “law enforcement” e ricerca e soccorso ha prodotto proprio in occasione del naufragio di fine febbraio dell’anno scorso a pochi metri dalle coste calabresi, quando morirono più di 90 persone, e sulla quale sta indagando la Procura di Crotone.

    Quello degli eventi strumentalmente classificati come di natura poliziesca in luogo del soccorso, anche dopo i fatti di Cutro, è solo uno dei dati attraverso i quali si può leggere come è andata lo scorso anno nel Mediterraneo. È possibile farlo dopo aver ottenuto dati inediti dal ministero dell’Interno, che rispetto al passato ha fortemente ridotto qualità e quantità degli elementi pubblicati nel cruscotto statistico giornaliero e nella sua rielaborazione di fine anno.

    Prima però partiamo dai dati noti. Nel 2023 sono sbarcate sulle coste italiane 157.651 persone (il Viminale talvolta ne riporta 157.652, ma la sostanza è identica). Il dato è il più alto dal 2017 ma inferiore al 2016, quando furono 181.436. Le prime cinque nazionalità dichiarate al momento dello sbarco, che rappresentano quasi il 50% degli arrivi, sono di cittadini della Guinea, Tunisia, Costa d’Avorio, Bangladesh, Egitto. I minori soli sono stati 17.319.

    E qui veniamo ai dati che ci ha trasmesso il Viminale a seguito di un’istanza di accesso civico generalizzato. La stragrande maggioranza delle persone sbarcate è partita nel 2023 dalla Tunisia: oltre 97mila persone sulle 157mila totali. Segue a distanza la Libia, con 52mila partenze, quasi doppiata, e poi più dietro la Turchia (7.150), Algeria, Libano e finanche Cipro.

    Come mostrano le elaborazioni grafiche dei dati governativi, ci sono stati mesi in cui dalla Tunisia sono sbarcate anche oltre 20mila persone. Una tendenza che ha conosciuto una brusca interruzione a partire dal mese di ottobre 2023, quando gli sbarchi in quota Tunisia, al netto delle condizioni meteo marine, sono crollati a poco meno di 1.900, attestandosi poco sotto i 5mila nei due mesi successivi.

    Tradotto: l’ultimo trimestre dello scorso anno ha visto una forte diminuzione degli sbarchi provenienti dalla Tunisia, Paese con il quale Unione europea e Italia hanno stretto il “solito” accordo che prevede soldi e forniture in cambio di “contrasto ai flussi”, ovvero contrasto ai diritti umani. È lo schema libico, con le differenze del caso. Il ministro Matteo Piantedosi il 31 dicembre 2023, intervistato da La Stampa, ha rivendicato la bontà della strategia parlando di “121.883 persone” (dando l’idea di un conteggio analitico e quotidiano) “bloccate” grazie alla “collaborazione con le autorità tunisine e libiche”.

    Un altro dato utilissimo per capire come “funziona” la macchina mediatica della presunta “emergenza immigrazione” è quello dei porti di sbarco. Il primo e incontrastato porto sul quale lo scorso anno è stata scaricata la stragrande maggioranza degli sbarchi è Lampedusa, con quasi 110mila arrivi (di cui “solo” 7.400 autonomi) contro i 5.500 di Augusta, Roccella Jonica, i 4.800 di Pantelleria e i 3.800 di Catania. In passato non è sempre stato così. Ma Lampedusa è troppo importante per due ragioni: dare in pasto all’opinione pubblica l’idea di una situazione esplosiva e ingestibile, bloccando i trasferimenti verso la terraferma (vedasi l’estate 2023), e contemporaneamente convogliare quanti più richiedenti asilo potenziali possibile nella macchina del trattenimento dell’hotspot.

    Benché in Italia si sia convinti che a soccorrere le persone in mare siano solo le acerrime nemiche Ong, i dati, ancora una volta, confermano il loro ruolo ridotto a marginale dopo anni di campagne diffamatorie, criminalizzazione penale e vera e propria persecuzione amministrativa. Nel 2023, infatti, gli assetti delle Organizzazioni non governative hanno salvato e sbarcato in Italia neanche 9mila persone. Poco più del 5% del totale. Anche nei mesi più intensi degli arrivi la quota delle Ong è stata limitata.

    Come noto, le poche navi umanitarie intervenute sono state deliberatamente indirizzate verso porti lontani. Il primo per numero di persone sbarcate è stato Brindisi (quasi 1.400 sbarcati su 9mila), ovvero 285 miglia in più rispetto al Sud-Ovest della Sicilia. Segue Lampedusa con 980, vero, ma poi ci sono Carrara (535 miglia di distanza in più dalla Sicilia), Trapani, Salerno, Bari, Civitavecchia, Ortona.

    Non è facile dire quanti giorni di navigazione in più questa “strategia” brutale abbia esattamente determinato. Un esperto operatore di ricerca e soccorso in mare aiuta a fare due conti a spanne: “Le navi normalmente viaggiano a meno di dieci nodi, calcolando una velocità di sette nodi andare a Brindisi implica circa 41 ore in più rispetto ai porti più vicini del Sud della Sicilia, come ad esempio Pozzallo. E per arrivare a Pozzallo dalla cosiddetta ‘SAR 1’, a Ovest di Tripoli, partendo da una distanza dalla costa libica di circa 35 miglia, tra Zuara e Zawiya, ci vogliono circa 24 ore”.

    Una recente analisi di Sos Humanity -ripresa dal Guardian a metà febbraio- ha stimato che questo modus operandi delle autorità italiane possa aver complessivamente fatto perdere alle navi delle Ong 374 giorni di operatività. Nell’anno in cui sono morte annegate ufficialmente almeno 2.500 persone e intercettate dalle milizie libiche e riportate indietro, sempre ufficialmente, quasi 17.200 (con l’ancora una volta dimostrata complicità dell’Agenzia europea Frontex). Ma sono tempi così oscuri che ostacolare le “ambulanze” è divenuto un vanto.

    https://altreconomia.it/i-dati-che-raccontano-la-guerra-ai-soccorsi-nellanno-nero-della-strage-

    #statistiques #débarquement #Italie #migrations #réfugiés #chiffres #sauvetage #ONG #SAR #search-and-rescue #Méditerranée #Lampedusa #law_enforcement #2023 #Tunisie #Libye #externalisation #accord #urgence #hotspot

  • FROM LIBYA TO TUNISIA : HOW THE EU IS EXTENDING THE PUSH-BACK REGIME BY PROXY IN THE CENTRAL MEDITERRANEAN

    On August 21, 2023, the rescue ship Aurora from Sea Watch was detained by the Italian authorities after refusing to disembark survivors in Tunisia as ordered by the Rome MRCC (Maritime Rescue Coordination Center), a country which by no means can be considered a place of safety.

    This episode is just one example of the efforts of European states to avoid arrivals on their shores at all costs, and to evade their responsibility for reception and #Search_and_Rescue (#SAR). Already in 2018, the European Commission, with its disembarkation platform project, attempted to force sea rescue NGOs to disembark survivors in North Africa. While this project was ultimately unsuccessful as it stood, European states have endeavored to increase the number of measures aimed at reducing crossings in the central Mediterranean.

    One of the strategies employed was to set up a “push-back by proxy regime”, outsourcing interceptions at sea to the Libyan Coast guards, enabling the sending back of people on the move to a territory in which their lives are at risk, undertaken by Libyan border forces under the control of the EU authorities, in contravention of principle of non-refoulement, one of the cornerstones of international refugee law. Since 2016, the EU and its member states have equipped, financed, and trained the Libyan coastguard and supported the creation of a MRCC in Tripoli and the declaration of a Libyan SRR (search and rescue region).

    This analysis details how the European Union and its member states are attempting to replicate in Tunisia the regime of refoulement by proxy set up in Libya just a few years earlier. Four elements are considered: strengthening the capacities of the Tunisian coastguard (equipment and training), setting up a coastal surveillance system, creating a functional MRCC and declaring a Tunisian SRR.
    A. Building capacity of the Garde Nationale Maritime
    Providing equipment

    For several decades now, Tunisia has been receiving equipment to strengthen its coast guard capabilities. After the Jasmine Revolution in 2011, Italy-Tunisia cooperation deepened. Under the informal agreement of April 5, 2011, 12 boats were delivered to the Tunisian authorities. In 2017, in a joint statement by the IItalian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and its Tunisian counterpart, the two parties committed to “closer cooperation in the fight against irregular migration and border management,” with a particular focus on the maritime border. In this context, the Italian Minister declared Italy’s support for the modernization and maintenance of the patrol vessels supplied to Tunisia (worth around 12 million euros) and the supply of new equipment for maritime border control. On March 13, 2019, Italy also supplied Tunisia with vehicles for maritime border surveillance, sending 50 4-wheelers designed to monitor the coasts.

    Recently, Germany also started to support the coast guard more actively in Tunisia, providing it with equipment for a boat workshop designed to repair coast guard vessels in 2019. As revealed in an answer to a parliamentary question, in the last two years, the Federal Police also donated 12 inflatable boats and 27 boat motors. On the French side, after a visit in Tunis in June 2023, the Interior Minister Gérard Darmanin announced 25 million euros in aid enabling Tunisia to buy border policing equipment and train border guards. In August 2023, the Italian authorities also promised hastening the provision of patrol boats and other vehicles aimed at preventing sea departures.

    Apart from EU member states, Tunisia has also received equipment from the USA. Between 2012 and 2019, the Tunisian Navy was equipped with 26 US-made patrol boats. In 2019, the Tunisian national guard was also reinforced with 3 American helicopters. Primarily designed to fight against terrorism, the US equipment is also used to monitor the Tunisian coast and to track “smugglers.”

    Above all, the supply of equipment to the Tunisian coastguard is gaining more and more support by the European Union. Following the EU-Tunisia memorandum signed on July 16, 2023, for which €150 million was pledged towards the “fight against illegal migration”, in September 2023, Tunisia received a first transfer under the agreement of €67 million “to finance a coast guard vessel, spare parts and marine fuel for other vessels as well as vehicles for the Tunisian coast guard and navy, and training to operate the equipment.”

    In a letter to the European Council, leaked by Statewatch in October 2023, the European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen highlighted the provision of vessels and support to the Tunisian coast guards: “Under the Memorandum of Understanding with Tunisia, we have delivered spare parts for Tunisian coast guards that are keeping 6 boats operation and others will be repaired by the end of the year.”
    Trainings the authorities

    In addition to supplying equipment, the European countries are also organizing training courses to enhance the skills of the Tunisian coastguard. In 2019, Italy’s Interior Ministry released €11 million to Tunisia’s government for use in efforts to stem the crossing of people on the move from Tunisia, and to provide training to local security forces involved in maritime border control.

    Under the framework of Phase III of the EU-supported IBM project (Integrated Border Management), Germany is also organizing training for the Tunisian coast guards. As revealed in the answer to a parliamentary question mentioned before, the German Ministry of Interior admitted that 3.395 members of the Tunisian National Guard and border police had been trained, including within Germany. In addition, 14 training and advanced training measures were carried out for the National Guard, the border police, and the coast guard. These training sessions were also aimed at learning how to use “control boats.”

    In a document presenting the “EU Support to Border Management Institutions in Libya and Tunisia” for the year 2021, the European Commission announced the creation of a “coast guard training academy.” In Tunisia, the project consists of implementing a training plan, rehabilitating the physical training environment of the Garde Nationale Maritime, and enhancing the cooperation between Tunisian authorities and all stakeholders, including EU agencies and neighboring countries. Implemented by the German Federal Police and the International Centre for Migration Policy Development (ICMPD), the project started in January 2023 and is supposed to run until June 2026, to the sum of 13,5 million EUR.

    Although the European Commission underlines the objective that “the Training Academy Staff is fully aware and acting on the basis of human rights standards” the increase in dangerous maneuvers and attacks perpetrated by the Tunisian coast guard since the increase in European support leaves little doubt that respect for human rights is far from top priority.

    On November 17, 2023, the ICMPD announced on its Linkedin account the inauguration of the Nefta inter-agency border management training center, as a benefit to the three agencies responsible for border management in Tunisia (Directorate General Directorate of Borders and Foreigners of the Ministry of the Interior, the General Directorate of Border Guard of the National Guard and the General Directorate of Customs).
    B. Setting up a coastal surveillance system

    In addition to supplying equipment, European countries also organize training courses to enhance the skills of European coastguards in the pursuit of an “early detection” strategy, which involves spotting boats as soon as they leave the Tunisian coast in order to outsource their interception to the Tunisian coastguard. As early as 2019, Italy expressed its willingness to install radar equipment in Tunisia and to establish “a shared information system that will promptly alert the Tunisian gendarmerie and Italian coast guard when migrant boats are at sea, in order to block them while they still are in Tunisian waters.” This ambition seems to have been achieved through the implementation of the system ISMaris in Tunisia.
    An Integrated System for Maritime Surveillance (ISMaris)

    The system ISMaris, or “Integrated System for Maritime Surveillance”, was first mentioned in the “Support Programme to Integrated Border Management in Tunisia” (IBM Tunisia, launched in 2015. Funded by the EU and Switzerland and implemented by the International Centre for Migration Policy Development (ICMPD), the first phase of the program (2015-2018) supported the equipment of the Garde Nationale Maritime with this system, defined as “a maritime surveillance system that centralizes information coming from naval assets at sea and from coastal radars […] [aiming] to connect the sensors (radar, VHF, GPS position, surveillance cameras) on board of selected Tunisian Coast Guard vessels, control posts, and command centers within the Gulf of Tunis zone in order for them to better communicate between each other.”

    The implementation of this data centralization system was then taken over by the “Border Management Programme for the Maghreb Region” (BMP-Maghreb), launched in 2018 and funded by the EU Emergency Trust Fund for Africa. The Tunisia component, funded with €24,5 million is implemented by ICMPD together with the Italian Ministry of Interior and designed to “strengthen the capacity of competent Tunisian authorities in the areas of maritime surveillance and migration management, including tackling migrant smuggling, search and rescue at sea, as well as in the coast guard sphere of competence.” With the BMP programme, the Tunisian Garde Maritime Nationale was equipped with navigational radars, thermal cameras, AIS and other IT equipment related to maritime surveillance.
    Data exchange with the EU

    The action document of the BMP program clearly states that one of the purposes of ISMaris is the reinforcement of “operational cooperation in the maritime domain between Tunisia and Italy (and other EU Member States, and possibly through EUROSUR and FRONTEX).” Established in 2013, the European Border Surveillance system (EUROSUR) is a framework for information exchange and cooperation between Member States and Frontex, to prevent the so-called irregular migration at external borders. Thanks to this system, Frontex already monitors the coast regions off Tunisia using aerial service and satellites.

    What remains dubious is the connection between IS-Maris and the EU surveillance-database. In 2020, the European Commission claimed that ISMariS was still in development and not connected to any non-Tunisian entity such as Frontex, the European Border Surveillance System (EUROSUR) or the Italian border control authorities. But it is likely that in the meantime information exchange between the different entities was systematized.

    In the absence of an official agreement, the cooperation between Frontex and Tunisia is unclear. As already mentioned in Echoes#3, “so far, it has not been possible to verify if Frontex has direct contact with the Tunisian Coast Guard as it is the case with the Libyan Coast Guard. Even if most of the interceptions happen close to Tunisian shores, some are carried out by the Tunisian Navy outside of territorial waters. […] Since May 2021 Frontex has been flying a drone, in addition to its different assets, monitoring the corridor between Tunisia and Lampedusa on a daily basis. While it is clear that Frontex is sharing data with the Italian authorities and that Italian authorities are sharing info on boats which are on the way from Tunisia to Italy with the Tunisian side, the communication and data exchanges between Frontex and Tunisian authorities remain uncertain.”

    While in 2021, Frontex reported that “no direct border related activities have been carried out in Tunisia due to Tunisian authorities’ reluctance to cooperate with Frontex”, formalizing the cooperation between Tunisia and Frontex seems to remain one of the EU’s priorities. In September 2023, a delegation from Tunisia visited Frontex headquarters in Poland, with the participation of the Ministries of Interior, Foreign Affairs and Defence. During this visit, briefings were held on the cross-border surveillance system EUROSUR and where all threads from surveillance from ships, aircraft, drones and satellites come together.

    However, as emphasized by Mathias Monroy, an independent researcher working on border externalization and the expansion of surveillance systems, “Tunisia still does not want to negotiate such a deployment of Frontex personnel to its territory, so a status agreement necessary for this is a long way off. The government in Tunis is also not currently seeking a working agreement to facilitate the exchange of information with Frontex.”

    This does not prevent the EU from continuing its efforts. In September 2023, in the wake of the thousands of arrivals on the island of Lampedusa, the head of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, reaffirmed, in a 10-point action plan, the need to have a “working arrangement between Tunisia and Frontex” and to “step up border surveillance at sea and aerial surveillance including through Frontex.” In a letter written by the European Commission in reply to the LIBE letter about the Tunisia deal sent on the Greens Party initiative in July 2023, the EU also openly admits that IT equipment for operations rooms, mobile radar systems and thermal imaging cameras, navigation radars and sonars have been given to Tunisia so far and that more surveillance equipment is to come.

    To be noted as well is that the EU4BorderSecurity program, which includes support to “inter-regional information sharing, utilizing tools provided by Frontex” has been extended for Tunisia until April 2025.
    C. Supporting the creation of a Tunisian MRCC and the declaration of a Search and rescue region (SRR)
    Building a MRCC in Tunisia, a top priority for the EU

    In 2021, the European Commission stated the creation of a functioning MRCC in Tunisia as a priority: “Currently there is no MRCC in Tunisia but the coordination of SAR events is conducted by Tunisian Navy Maritime Operations Centre. The official establishment of a MRCC is a necessary next step, together with the completion of the radar installations along the coast, and will contribute to implementing a Search and rescue region in Tunisia. The establishment of an MRCC would bring Tunisia’s institutional set-up in line with the requirements set in the International Convention on Maritime Search and Rescue (SAR) of 1979 (as required by the Maritime Safety Committee of the International Maritime Organisation IMO).”

    The objective of creating a functioning Tunisian MRCC is also mentioned in a European Commission document presenting the “strategy for the regional, multi-country cooperation on migration with partner countries in North Africa” for the period 2021-2027. The related project is detailed in the “Action Document for EU Support to Border Management Institutions in Libya and Tunisia (2021),” whose overall objective is to “contribute to the improvement of respective state services through the institutional development of the Maritime Rescue Coordination Centres” in the North Africa region. The EU also promotes a “regional approach to a Maritime Rescue Coordination Center,” that “would improve the coordination in the Central Mediterranean in conducting SAR operations and support the fight against migrant smuggling and trafficking in human beings networks in Libya and Tunisia.”

    The Tunisia component of the programs announces the objective to “support the establishment of a Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre, [… ] operational 24/7 in a physical structure with functional equipment and trained staff,” establishing “cooperation of the Tunisian authorities with all national stakeholders, EU agencies and neighbouring countries on SAR.”

    This project seems to be gradually taking shape. On the website of Civipol, the French Ministry of the Interior’s service and consultancy company, a new project entitled “Support for Search and Rescue Operations at Sea in Tunisia” is mentioned in a job advertisement. It states that this project, funded by the European Union, implemented together with the GIZ and starting in September 2023, aims to “support the Tunisian authorities in strengthening their operational capacities (fleet and other)” and “provide support to the Tunisian authorities in strengthening the Marine Nationale and the MRCC via functional equipment and staff training.”

    In October 2023, the German development agency GIZ also published a job offer for a project manager in Tunisia, to implement the EU-funded project “Support to border management institution (MRCC)” in Tunisia (the job offer was deleted from the website in the meantime but screenshots can be shared on demand). The objective of the project is described as such: “improvement of the Tunisia’s Search and Rescue (SAR) capacity through reinforced border management institutions to conduct SAR operations at sea and the fight against migrant smuggling and human being trafficking by supporting increased collaboration between Tunisian actors via a Maritime RescueCoordination Centre (MRCC).”

    According to Mathias Monroy, other steps have been taken in this direction: “[the Tunisian MRCC] has already received an EU-funded vessel tracking system and is to be connected to the “Seahorse Mediterranean” network. Through this, the EU states exchange information about incidents off their coasts. This year Tunisia has also sent members of its coast guards to Italy as liaison officers – apparently a first step towards the EU’s goal of “linking” MRCC’s in Libya and Tunisia with their “counterparts” in Italy and Malta.”

    The establishment of a functional MRCC represents a major challenge for the EU, with the aim to allow Tunisia to engage actively in coordination of interceptions. Another step in the recognition of the Tunisian part as a valid SAR actor by the IMO is the declaration of a search and rescue region (SRR).
    The unclear status of the current Tunisian area of responsibility

    Adopted in 1979 in Hamburg, the International Convention on Maritime Search and Rescue (SAR – Search & Rescue Convention) aimed to establish an international search and rescue plan to encourage cooperation and coordination between neighboring states in order to ensure better assistance to persons in distress at sea. The main idea of the convention is to divide seas and oceans into search and rescue zones in which states are responsible for providing adequate SAR services, by establishing rescue coordination centers and setting operating procedures to be followed in case of SAR operations.

    Whereas Tunisia acceded to the treaty in 1998, this was not followed by the delimitation of the Tunisian SAR zone of responsibilities nor by regional agreements with neighboring states. It is only in 2013 that Tunisia declared the limits of its SRR, following the approval of the Maghreb Convention in the Field of Search and Rescue in 2013 and by virtue of Decree No. 2009-3333 of November 2, 2009, setting out the intervention plans and means to assist aircraft in distress. In application of this norm, Tunisian authorities are required to intervene immediately, following the first signal of help or emergency, in the limits of the Tunisia sovereign borders (12 nautical miles). This means that under national legislation, Tunisian authorities are obliged to intervene only in territorial waters. Outside this domain, the limits of SAR interventions are not clearly defined.

    A point to underline is that the Tunisian territorial waters overlap with the Maltese SRR. The Tunisian Exclusive Economic Zone – which does not entail any specific duty connected to SAR – also overlaps with the Maltese SRR and this circumstance led in the past to attempts by the Maltese authorities to drop their SAR responsibilities claiming that distress cases were happening in this vast area. Another complex topic regards the presence, in international waters which is part of the Maltese SRR, of Tunisian oil platforms. Also, in these cases the coordination of SAR operations have been contested and were often subject to a “ping-pong” responsibility from the involved state authorities.
    Towards the declaration of a huge Tunisian SRR?

    In a research document published by the IMO Institute (International Maritime Organization), Akram Boubakri (Lieutenant Commander, Head, Maritime Affairs, Tunisian Coast Guard according to IMO Institute website) wrote that at the beginning of 2020, Tunisia officially submitted the coordinates of the Tunisian SRR to the IMO. According to this document, these new coordinates, still pending the notification of consideration by the IMO, would cover a large area, creating two overlapping areas with neighboring SAR zones – the first one with Libya, the second one with Malta* (see map below):

    *This delimitation has to be confirmed (tbc). Nothing proves that the coordinates mentioned in the article were actually submitted to the IMO

    As several media outlets have reported, the declaration of an official Tunisian SRR is a project supported by the European Union, which was notably put back on the table on the occasion of the signing of the Memorandum of Understanding signed in July 2023 between the EU and Tunisia.

    During the summer 2023, the Civil MRCC legal team initiated a freedom of information access request to the Tunisian authorities to clarify the current status of the Tunisian SRR. The Tunisian Ministry of Transport/the Office of the Merchant Navy and Ports replied that”[n]o legal text has yet been published defining the geographical marine limits of the search and rescue zone stipulated in the 1979 International Convention for Search and Rescue […]. We would like to inform you that the National Committee for the Law of the Sea, chaired by the Ministry of National Defence, has submitted a draft on this subject, which has been sent in 2019 to the International Maritime Organisation through the Ministry of Transport.” A recourse to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Interior was sent but no reply was received yet.

    Replying in December 2023 to a freedom of information access request initiated by the Civil MRCC, the IMO stated that “Tunisia has not communicated their established search and rescue region to the IMO Secretariat.” However, on November 3, 2023, the Tunisian Ministerial Council adopted a “draft law on the regulation of search and rescue at sea in Tunisia’s area of responsibility.” A text which, according to FTDES, provides for the creation of a Tunisian SAR zone, although it has not yet been published. While the text still has to be ratified by the parliament, it is quite clear that the Tunisian authorities are currently making concrete steps to align on the IMO standards and, by doing so, on the EU agenda.
    Conclusion: A EU strategy to escape from its SAR responsibilities

    While some analysts have seen the drop in arrivals in Italy from Tunisia in recent months as a sign of the “success” of the European Union’s strategy to close its borders (in November, a drop of over 80% compared to the summer months), in reality, the evolution of these policies proves that reinforcing a border only shifts migratory routes. From autumn onwards, the Libyan route has seen an increase in traffic, with many departing from the east of the country. These analyses fail to consider the agency of people on the move, and the constant reinvention of strategies for transgressing borders.

    While condemning the generalization of a regime of refoulement by proxy in the central Mediterranean and the continued brutalization of the border regime, the Civil MRCC aims to give visibility to the autonomy of migration and non-stop solidarity struggles for freedom of movement!

    https://civilmrcc.eu/from-libya-to-tunisia-how-the-eu-is-extending-the-push-back-regime-by-prox

    #push-backs #refoulements #asile #migrations #réfugiés #frontières #externalisation #Tunisie #Libye #EU #UE #Union_européenne #gardes-côtes_libyens #push-back_by_proxy_regime #financement #training #formation #gardes-côtes #MRCC #Méditerranée #Mer_Méditerranée #Libyan_SRR #technologie #matériel #Integrated_Border_Management #surveillance #Integrated_System_for_Maritime_Surveillance (#ISMaris) #International_Centre_for_Migration_Policy_Development (#ICMPD) #Border_Management_Programme_for_the_Maghreb_Region #Trust_Fund #Trust_Fund_for_Africa #EUROSUR #Frontex #ISMariS #Search_and_rescue_region (#SRR)

    ping @_kg_

  • Chile searches for those missing from Pinochet dictatorship with the help of artificial intelligence

    At the end of August, Chilean president Gabriel Boric launched the Search Plan for more than 1,000 Chileans. Today, old judicial documents, many typewritten, have been digitized to apply cutting edge technology and cross-reference data.

    On Monday 15 January, at the inauguration of the “Congress of the Future” in Santiago, President Gabriel Boric stated that artificial intelligence, the theme of the 13th version of the conference, “will play an important role in the search for our #missing detainees.” He was referring to the #Search_Plan to find over 1,000 individuals who were victims of the Augusto Pinochet dictatorship (1973-1990), which his Administration presented on August 30, 2023, on the eve of the September 11 commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the coup d’état that ousted Salvador Allende, the socialist president.

    The plan, spearheaded by Justice Minister Luis Cordero, is an initiative that is intended to become a permanent State policy. According to Justice data, after the dictatorship in Chile there were 1,469 victims of forced disappearance and of these, 1,092 are missing detainees, while 377, who were executed, are missing as well. So far only 307 have been identified.

    To embark on this new search, which has already been initiated by the courts, Cordero tells EL PAÍS that he is working with two main sources. On the one hand, the judicial investigations, which comprise millions of pages. And on the other, the administrative records of the cases that are scattered around state agencies. These include the Human Rights Program, created in 1997, which falls under the Ministry of Justice, as well as previous investigations in military Prosecutor’s Offices (which used to close the cases) and the files that provided the basis for the 1991 National Commission for Truth and Reconciliation Report, driven by the former president, Patricio Aylwin (1990-1994), and in which an account of the victims was given for the first time.

    Typewritten documents

    Unsholster, a company specialized in data analysis, data science and software development, whose general manager is the civil engineer Antonio Díaz-Araujo, is behind the technological analysis of the information. The Human Rights Program has already digitalized the information, while the Judicial Branch is 80% digitalized. The firm was awarded the project in a bidding process in the context of the Search Plan — it is in charge of the implementation of artificial intelligence.

    Something of relevance in this investigation is that the judicial files, separated according to each case, were processed in the old Chilean justice system (changed in 2005), which implies that the judges’ inquiries are on paper — most of them have the pages sewn into a notebook by hand, written on typewriters, and there are even several handwritten parts. These are the ones containing statements, black and white photographs, photocopies of photos, forensic reports and old police reports.

    However, in addition, the judicial inquiries that have been undertaken since 2000 will provide a more up-to-date and crucial basis of information in the analysis. Since then, hundreds of cases that had been shelved during the dictatorship have been reopened by judges with exclusive dedication to cases of human rights violations with sentences.

    Cordero points out that “there is a lot of information in the hands of the State and there is no human capacity to process it, because it needs to be interconnected. For example, there are testimonies that appear in some files and not in others. And, in addition, depending on the judges, there were lines of investigation, so there may have been precedents that were useful for some and not for others.” For this reason, the justice minister says artificial intelligence can play a key role, as he believes that in these cases, the cross-referencing of information will be crucial.

    “All that information is in judicial and administrative files, and what digitization accomplishes first is to integrate them in one place. And then to work with artificial intelligence, which allows us to reduce the investigation gaps using algorithms, which are being tested, and which can read, for example, dates, names, places, for instance, in those files,” the minister adds.
    4.7 million pages and counting

    Unsholster is currently in the pre-project stage, before it starts programming, Díaz-Araujo explains to EL PAÍS. “But we have already touched on most of the file types that we will need to deal with,” he says. The documents that have been coming in, scanned sheet by sheet, are in folders, in PDF format, and therefore do not correspond to a logic that allows data to be searched because they are recorded as images. For this reason, the first step has been to start applying OCR (Optical Character Recognition) technology so that they can be transformed into data.

    They already have information — which does not yet include the thousands of files of the Judicial Branch — totaling 46,768 PDF files, which amounts to more than 4.7 million pages. “If a person were to read every one of those pages, out loud and without understanding or relating facts, they would probably spend eight hours a day reading for 27 years,” explains the civil engineer.

    Once those files are moved to pages, Díaz-Araujo says, “a big classification tree is created, which allows you to classify pages that have images, manuscripts, typewritten pages, or Word-style files. And then you start to apply, on each one of them, the best OCR” for each type of page, because the key, he adds, lies in “what material is brought to each one.”

    Another stage, he explains, is to create different types of dictionaries and entities “that can be learned with use.” For example, nicknames of people, places, streets (many have changed names since the dictatorship), ways of writing and dates.

    This implies, he says, creating a topology of entities in the reading, using technology, of each of the texts “that is capable of rapidly correlating different pages, people, places and dates in a highly flexible way.” He gives an example: “Many of the offenders may have nicknames, and several of them may be written in different ways, but that doesn’t mean that they won’t be linked. What you do is create technology that is capable of suggesting other correlations to the analyst as they occur over time.”

    Therefore, he elaborates, “there is artificial intelligence in the classification of documents; there is high intelligence in transforming documents from an image to searchable data and then, there is a lot of it, in the creation of entities that enable the connection of some documents with others. And, finally, the most necessary thing in a platform is that it should be about the possibility of competing algorithms, with artificial intelligence or without, on this data. But it should not be bound to a technology, because the biggest issue is being open to new technologies of the future. If you keep it closed, it becomes a stumbling block.”

    He continues: “Another key point of this platform is that the original data, and the transformed data, are retained. But you can continue to create other data on top of that. There is no time machine that kind of freezes the ability to produce more algorithms and more information with new platforms in the future.”
    Contreras and Krassnoff

    Five months after technology was first applied to the nearly 47,000 documents of Unsholster’s Human Rights Program, it is already possible, thanks to the implementation of the initial OCR on the identification documents, to find thousands of mentions of at least four military officers who were part of Pinochet’s secret police, the feared DINA (National Intelligence Directorate).

    Manuel Contreras, its director general, sentenced at the time of his death in 2015 to 526 years in prison for hundreds of crimes, appears 2,800 times; Pedro Espinoza and Miguel Krassnoff, both serving sentences in Punta Peuco prison, 2,079 and 2,954 mentions, respectively. And Marcelo Moren Brito, who was the torturer of Ángela Jeria, the mother of former socialist president, Michelle Bachelet, 2,284 times.

    For now they are only mentions. But from now on, names, facts, dates and places can be linked and related, says Díaz-Araujo.

    https://english.elpais.com/international/2024-01-18/chile-searches-for-those-missing-from-pinochet-dictatorship-with-the

    #Chili #intelligence_artificielle #identification #fosses_communes #dictature #AI #IA

  • loupe-php/loupe: A #fulltext #search engine with #tokenization, #stemming, #typo_tolerance, #filters and #geo support based on only #PHP and #SQLite.
    https://github.com/loupe-php/loupe

    An SQLite based, PHP-only fulltext search engine.

    Loupe…
    –…only requires PHP and SQLite, you don’t need anything else - no containers, no nothing
    –…is typo-tolerant (based on the State Set Index Algorithm and Levenshtein)
    –…supports phrase search using " quotation marks
    –…supports filtering (and ordering) on any attribute with any SQL-inspired filter statement
    –…supports filtering (and ordering) on Geo distance
    –…orders relevance based on a typical TF-IDF Cosine similarity algorithm
    …auto-detects languages
    –…supports stemming
    –…is very easy to use
    –…is all-in-all just the easiest way to replace your good old SQL LIKE %...% queries with a way better search experience but without all the hassle of an additional service to manage. SQLite is everywhere and all it needs is your filesystem.

  • #Search-and-rescue in the Central Mediterranean Route does not induce migration : Predictive modeling to answer causal queries in migration research

    State- and private-led search-and-rescue are hypothesized to foster irregular migration (and thereby migrant fatalities) by altering the decision calculus associated with the journey. We here investigate this ‘pull factor’ claim by focusing on the Central Mediterranean route, the most frequented and deadly irregular migration route towards Europe during the past decade. Based on three intervention periods—(1) state-led Mare Nostrum, (2) private-led search-and-rescue, and (3) coordinated pushbacks by the Libyan Coast Guard—which correspond to substantial changes in laws, policies, and practices of search-and-rescue in the Mediterranean, we are able to test the ‘pull factor’ claim by employing an innovative machine learning method in combination with causal inference. We employ a Bayesian structural time-series model to estimate the effects of these three intervention periods on the migration flow as measured by crossing attempts (i.e., time-series aggregate counts of arrivals, pushbacks, and deaths), adjusting for various known drivers of irregular migration. We combine multiple sources of traditional and non-traditional data to build a synthetic, predicted counterfactual flow. Results show that our predictive modeling approach accurately captures the behavior of the target time-series during the various pre-intervention periods of interest. A comparison of the observed and predicted counterfactual time-series in the post-intervention periods suggest that pushback policies did affect the migration flow, but that the search-and-rescue periods did not yield a discernible difference between the observed and the predicted counterfactual number of crossing attempts. Hence we do not find support for search-and-rescue as a driver of irregular migration. In general, this modeling approach lends itself to forecasting migration flows with the goal of answering causal queries in migration research.

    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-38119-4

    #appel_d'air #migrations #réfugiés #frontières #sauvetage #pull-factor #facteur_pull #chiffres #statistiques #rhétorique #afflux #invasion #sauvetage_en_mer #démonstration #déconstruction #fact-checking

    –—

    ajouté à la métaliste qui réunit des fils de discussion pour démanteler la rhétorique de l’#appel_d'air en lien avec les #sauvetages en #Méditerranée :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/1012135

    • Sur les #données et le #code qui ont servi à l’étude :

      We document the various data sources used in Table S1 in Supplementary Materials. Though most data sources
      are publicly available—with the exception of the Sabre data on air traffic, we are unable to upload our data set
      to a repository due to data-usage requirements and proprietary restrictions. The data that support the findings
      of this study are available from various sources documented in Table S1 in Supplementary Materials but restrictions
      apply to the availability of these data, which were used under license for the current study, and so are not
      publicly available. Data are however available from the authors upon reasonable request and with permission of
      the various third party owners of the data. The code to construct the data set and perform the various statistical
      analyses is available at https://github.com/xlejx-rodsxn/sar_migration

      https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-38119-4.pdf

    • Migranti, il pull factor non esiste. La prova del nove in uno studio scientifico

      Attraverso l’uso di tecniche statistiche avanzatissime e del machine learning quattro ricercatori hanno incrociato migliaia di dati relativi al decennio 2011-2020 dimostrando che le attività di ricerca e soccorso, istituzionali o delle Ong, non fanno aumentare le partenze dai paesi nordafricani. Come sostenuto per anni dalle destre e non solo.

      Le attività di ricerca e soccorso nel Mediterraneo centrale non costituiscono un fattore di attrazione per i migranti, cioè non li spingono a partire. Lo dimostra uno studio pubblicato sulla rivista Scientific Reports, dello stesso gruppo editoriale di Nature sebbene non si tratti della più nota e importante collega. Per la prima volta allo scopo di verificare l’esistenza di questo presunto pull factor sono state utilizzate tecniche statistiche particolarmente avanzate e sistemi di machine learning capaci di far interagire molte banche dati.

      I ricercatori Alejandra Rodríguez Sánchez, Julian Wucherpfennig, Ramona Rischke e Stefano Maria Iacus hanno raccolto informazioni sul decennio 2011-2020 provenienti da diversi ambiti – tassi di cambio, prezzi internazionali delle merci, livelli di disoccupazione, conflitti, condizioni climatiche – e le hanno usate per identificare i fattori che meglio prevedono le variazioni numeriche delle partenze da Tunisia e Libia. La loro attenzione si è concentrata su tre fasi che riflettono cambiamenti sostanziali di natura politica, legale e operativa del fenomeno analizzato: la vasta operazione di salvataggio messa in campo dall’Italia tra il 18 ottobre 2013 e il 31 ottobre dell’anno seguente, cioè Mare Nostrum; l’arrivo delle navi umanitarie delle Ong, a partire dal 26 agosto 2014; l’istituzione della zona Sar (search and rescue) libica e la collaborazione tra Tripoli e Unione Europea, dal 2017, in funzione anti-migranti.

      «Abbiamo comparato il fenomeno delle partenze prima e dopo l’inizio delle attività di ricerca e soccorso, il nostro modello predittivo dice che sarebbe andata allo stesso modo anche se le seconde non fossero intervenute», spiega Rodríguez Sánchez. Il modello è di tipo contro-fattuale: mostra cosa sarebbe successo modificando un certo fattore. In questo caso le operazioni Sar, che dunque non fanno aumentare le traversate.

      La forza del metodo statistico usato è di permettere di investigare non soltanto il terreno della correlazione tra due fenomeni, ma anche quello della presunta causalità di uno rispetto all’altro. La conclusione è che le navi di soccorso non sono il motivo delle traversate, o anche solo del loro aumento, ma esattamente l’opposto: costituiscono una risposta a esse. Sono altri i fattori che spingono le persone a migrare e rischiare la vita nel Mediterraneo, sono estremamente variegati e complessi, riguardano la povertà, la disoccupazione, le persecuzioni politiche, gli effetti del cambiamento climatico.

      Lo studio ha poi rilevato un altro elemento: la cooperazione Libia-Ue ha effettivamente ridotto le traversate, che dal 2017 sono state meno di quelle che si sarebbero dovute verificare secondo il modello predittivo. I ricercatori però avvertono che questo ha avuto un altissimo costo umano e che, in ogni caso, le politiche di esternalizzazione «non incidono sui fattori strutturali che influenzano un certo flusso e potrebbero forzare i potenziali migranti a seguire rotte ancora più pericolose». Se anche producono dei risultati in termini di deterrenza, insomma, ciò avviene esclusivamente a stretto giro, spostando il problema solo un po’ più in là.

      «Questa importante ricerca mostra a livello strutturale che le politiche di salvataggio, anche le più grandi e organizzate, non sembrano far aumentare le traversate. Noi stiamo indagando l’effetto puntuale: cioè se la presenza di singole navi Ong davanti alle coste libiche incida sulle persone che partono», commenta Matteo Villa, ricercatore dell’Istituto per gli studi di politica internazionale (Ispi). Villa nel 2019 ha pubblicato il primo studio scientifico che smentiva la tesi delle navi Ong come fattore di attrazione. Tra qualche mese uscirà un aggiornamento con una base dati molto più ampia. «Conferma quanto avevamo osservato quattro anni fa – anticipa Villa al manifesto – L’unica correlazione che abbiamo trovato riguarda i mesi più freddi: tra dicembre, gennaio e febbraio ci sono più partenze se le Ong sono in missione. Ma parliamo di numeri irrilevanti: lo scorso anno 300 persone sulle 50mila arrivate dalla Libia».

      La tesi del pull factor è nata nel 2014 quando l’allora direttore di Frontex, l’agenzia europea per il controllo delle frontiere esterne, Gil Arias-Fernández iniziò a sostenere pubblicamente che le navi di Mare Nostrum stavano facendo aumentare i flussi dal Nord Africa. In una Risk Analysis della stessa agenzia relativa al 2016 l’accusa è stata spostata sulle Ong, intervenute nel frattempo a colmare il vuoto lasciato dalla chiusura dell’operazione italiana. Da allora questa teoria è stata un cavallo di battaglia delle destre ed è tornata in voga dopo l’insediamento del governo Meloni. Lo scorso autunno il ministro dell’Interno Matteo Piantedosi e quello degli Esteri Antonio Tajani, tra gli altri, hanno più volte citato un misterioso rapporto di Frontex che avrebbe ribadito lo stesso assunto per il 2021.

      Di quel rapporto non si è mai saputo nulla, ma ora abbiamo uno studio scientifico che smentisce il pull factor per l’ennesima volta. Intanto questa retorica ha influenzato le scelte dell’attuale esecutivo e anni di politiche migratorie basate sulla criminalizzazione delle Ong e sul disimpegno istituzionale dalla ricerca e dal soccorso davanti alle coste libiche. C’è da sperare che nuove ricercje facciano luce su quante vittime hanno causato simili norme e prassi, slegate da qualsiasi rapporto con la realtà e basate soltanto sulla propaganda.

      https://ilmanifesto.it/il-pull-factor-non-esiste-la-prova-del-nove-in-uno-studio-scientifico

      #propagande

    • Sea rescue operations do not promote migration, study finds

      Rescue operations do not incentivise migrants try to cross the Mediterranean, a recent study has found. Instead conflicts, economic hardship, natural and climate disasters, and the weather are reportedly key drivers of migration.

      Irregular migrant departures from the coasts of North Africa to Europe are not encouraged by search and rescue missions in the Central Mediterranean, a recent study has found. Instead, factors such as conflicts, economic hardship, natural disasters, and weather conditions drive migration.
      Rescue operations are not a ’pull factor’

      The study was published in Scientific Reports by an international research group led by Alejanda Rodríguez Sánchez from the University of Potsdam (Germany). The scientists looked at the number of attempts to cross the Central Mediterranean between 2011 and 2020.

      Through various simulations, the researchers tried to identify factors that can best predict changes in the number of sea crossings. The factors that they looked at included the number of search and rescue missions — both by state authorities and NGOs, as well as the currency exchange rates, the cost of international raw materials, unemployment rates, conflicts, violence, the rates of flight travel between Africa, the Middle East and Europe and meteorological conditions.
      Libya: Pushbacks reduced migration, increased human rights violations

      The study also looked at the increased activities of the Libyan coast guard since 2017, intercepting migrant boats and returning migrants to Libya. Researchers found that this had caused a reduction in the number of departure attempts and might have discouraged migration.

      The authors pointed out that, however, this has coincided with the reports of a worsening of human rights for migrants in Libya — particularly in the detention centers where migrants are being held after being stopped at sea.

      The researchers looked at migration on an “aggregate-level” and did not look at “micro-motives of migrants and smugglers”, they pointed out in the study. They recommended that future studies should do an in-depth analysis of the impact of search and rescue missions at sea on the decisions of individual migrants and human traffickers.

      https://www.infomigrants.net/en/post/50875/sea-rescue-operations-do-not-promote-migration-study-finds

  • 10 Reasons To Consider a #search Engine Alternative to #google
    https://hackernoon.com/10-reasons-to-consider-a-search-engine-alternative-to-google-a4d46f79154

    If you’re using Google as your only search engine, it’s time for you to search for a new search engine. You, like most people, have probably developed quite the Google habit over the years. It’s been the most commonly used search engine for nearly 20 years. While Google may seem to work extremely well for you, it’s likely coming at the cost of losing your privacy and losing an objective view of the information on the internet.Reason #1: Google Tracks Your SearchesWhen you use Google, your search term gets linked to your device and Google stores that information. It then uses that information to target you with ads.According to Google’s Privacy Policy, “When you’re not signed in to a Google Account, we store the information we collect with unique identifiers tied to the browser, application, or (...)

    #alternative-search-engine #search-engines #alternative-to-google

  • How can you give a boost to your business #seo using Referral Traffic
    https://hackernoon.com/how-can-you-give-a-boost-to-your-business-seo-using-referral-traffic-893

    There is no doubt on the fact that Search Engine Optimization or SEO is the primary source to gain traffic on our website. We all keep a primary focus on SEO in order to ensure that the website gains more and more users. But it is a known and accepted fact that SEO is slow and takes time.Many people concentrate solely on SEO and often complain of sub-par results. Let us find out the actual truth behind it and what can we do to overcome the slowness of SEO.In any game you play, be it cricket or tennis, you cannot excel just by practicing in the nets. You need to gain substantial match time and there are many other factors like mental health, composure and several small factors that unite to produce the best results together.The situation is similar here. SEO may well be the key factor (...)

    #referral-marketing #search-engine-optimizati #startup #marketing

  • Dead Craze Or Just Starting: Expired Domain Finders
    https://hackernoon.com/dead-craze-or-just-starting-expired-domain-finders-60187897c4cf?source=r

    Expired #domains are not a game. But they are a worthy investment for one with a trained eye. Find out in this article why that is.Expired domains are a very evergreen niche it seems, post dot com bust. Site builders, internet investors and more are spending more money than ever to get a sense of what will be the next great digital business.It can come at any time, any trend, and most people are scouring the internet digging through volumes of feeds, lists and more to find something potentially profitable.Most will fail.Why?They’re doing what everyone else is doing. The rare few are using highly calibrated expired domains finder to find good ideas before they are even made.As new domain endings are popping up, there are more opportunities than ever. The problem lies in their (...)

    #expired-domains #marketing #search #seo

  • 8 Common Link Building Myths That Are Holding Back Your Website
    https://hackernoon.com/8-common-link-building-myths-that-are-holding-back-your-website-173307ab

    Link Building MythsThe myth is, after all, the never ending story!!Similar holds true for gossips too!!There is no end to the gossips, doing the round, much beyond the school grounds. The mind-boggling questions whether Google changed something or was it merely an algorithm update leads to infinite brainstorming sessions happening around the globe.As long as the search engines veil their algorithms in secrecy, the global industry will persevere to be rife with gossip, myths, and spams.And guess what it results in….This encourages the businesses to follow wrong strategies or seriously ending up damaging their backlink profile or perhaps more severe ones like a spiteful Google penalty, shifting which is quite a sturdy task.The fact is that everything, included under #seo and backlink building (...)

    #search-engine-optimizatio #link-building #link-building-myths #marketing

  • #duckduckgo Vs. #google : What You Need to Know
    https://hackernoon.com/duckduckgo-vs-google-what-you-need-to-know-869368b08c4f?source=rss----3a

    DuckDuckGo vs. Google: What You Need to KnowAdweek: DuckDuckGo vs. GoogleThere’s no denying that we are years away from seeing any other search engine take over Google. Yes, it has grown thaaaaat big and has left us so dependent on itself that it just can’t happen so quick.Google tracks almost all our activities through our smart devices — especially so in the case of Android devices. The places you visit, the steps you walk, the time you spend on each website, the searches you make, the products you click on and so on.If you are using Google devices and/or its products, Google is behind you.Everywhere. All the time.https://medium.com/media/81f09925aa4750abf367b5b7505a4718/href(If you’re wondering, yes, Google does know exactly what you watched the last night and the night before it and (...)

    #search-engines #duckduckgo-vs-google #google-vs-duckduckgo

  • Learning to Rank for Job #search
    https://hackernoon.com/learning-to-rank-for-job-search-d1dc44d7070?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3--

    Evaluating Learning to Rank Algorithms to Improve Relevance in Job SearchWhat we learned from experimenting with “smart” relevance ranking.Handshake’s mission is to democratize opportunity by making sure that every student, regardless of where they go to school or who they know, can find a meaningful career. At the core of Handshake’s student product is a job search engine, where our 14 million students and young alumni can discover jobs from more than 300,000 employers.Towards the end of last year, our data and platform teams decided to experiment with fundamentally different ways to power job search. Here, we’ll discuss how we approached the problem, the service we built, and what we learned from the process.How We Currently Do Job SearchAs with typical search engines, we index our (...)

    #data-science #job-search-ranking #job-search #elasticsearch

  • A Short Essay: My Notes On Voice Search
    https://hackernoon.com/a-short-essay-my-notes-on-voice-search-4b285a7458f2?source=rss----3a8144

    A Short Essay On Voice SearchAs part of the team at WordLift, I had a privileged view of how the landscape of search and voice is evolving. Also, on FourWeekMBA I’ve experimented in the last two years with Google’s advanced features (carousels, knowledge panels and featured snippets) which give us — I argue — an important overview of how voice search might look like.In addition, I’ve already talked about voice search and why I think is critical to Google future business strategy.Let me start by a couple of moves Google has made which show — I argue — how much the company is betting on voice search. For instance, in 2018, Google invested in San Diego-based startup, KaiOS.This is a company that created an operating system for feature phones (the dumb brother of a smartphone). What’s so incredible about (...)

    #digital-marketing #search-engine-marketing #voice-search-app #voice-search #artificial-intelligence

  • Understanding binary #search
    https://hackernoon.com/understanding-binary-search-e82d7bcbc06f?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3---4

    Suppose, numbers is a list/array of integers that are sorted in nondecreasing order. We need to determine whether an element x is present in the list or not. There are n elements in the list .Linear searchBefore using binary search let’s check how linear search will perform in this problem.Let’s, n = 10⁶ ( here,numbers is a list of 10⁶ integers).If x is present at the first position of the list then we will get our expected result at the first iteration. This will work in O(1) time. Pretty fast! NO?But if x is present at 10⁶th position(or not present in the list) then it will take O(n) time to calculate the result and if we search for n times then time complexity will be O(n²), pretty slow, NO?So we can say that, at worst case linear search will work in O(n²) time complexity (for n number of (...)

    #javascript #algorithms #binary-search #python

  • #searchpedia : A List of 250+ Search Engines
    https://hackernoon.com/searchpedia-a-list-of-250-search-engines-40198146adfc?source=rss----3a81

    An Exhaustive List of All Search Engines from the Dawn of the InternetSince the dawn of the Internet Era, we have been flooded with an ocean of information. But without a good search engine, this ocean is useless.Search Engines have gone through a great journey, we saw a lot of them, some came and went, and some stay to this date.Here is an incomplete, but a big list of search engines. If you find something wrong or missing, then shoot your suggestions in the comments.We have categorized the search engines according to their use-cases. Enjoy!All-Purpose Search EnginesGoogle: Well, probably you used this for coming to this article. The world’s most popular search engine.Visit: http://www.google.comBing Search: Microsoft’s entry into the burgeoning search engine market. Better late than (...)

    #alternative-search-engine #list-of-search-engines #search-engines #all-search-engines

  • Les données que récolte #Google – Ch.6
    https://framablog.org/2018/12/18/les-donnees-que-recolte-google-ch-6

    Voici déjà la traduction du sixième chapitre de Google Data Collection, l’étude élaborée par l’équipe du professeur Douglas C. Schmidt, spécialiste des systèmes logiciels, chercheur et enseignant à l’Université Vanderbilt. Si vous les avez manqués, retrouvez les chapitres précédents déjà … Lire la suite­­

    #G.A.F.A.M. #Internet_et_société #Non_classé #collecte #Gmail #Gmaps #Search #YouTube

  • #alexa Rank: Everything You Need To Know
    https://hackernoon.com/alexa-rank-everything-you-need-to-know-fbce53349db2?source=rss----3a8144

    Having a high ranking with Google is how most people measure the success of their online marketing efforts, but Alexa rank is also equally important. Some #seo experts believe that Alexa rank is just as important as Google rank for websites looking to attract more traffic and increase conversions.Being aware of your website’s Alexa Rank could help you optimize your website to generate more traffic and sales conversions. In this article, I have detailed everything that you need to know about the Alexa ranking system.HANDPICKED RELATED CONTENT:SEO for CEOs: Keywords, Ranking and ConversionOnline Community: How to Build One for Your Business?What is Alexa Rank?The Alexa ranking system was set up by Alexa.com, a subsidiary of Amazon.com. A website’s Alexa rank shows how popular that website is (...)

    #marketing-strategies #digital-marketing #search-engine-marketing

  • #crowdsourcing The Image #search
    https://hackernoon.com/crowdsourcing-my-image-search-eb2e114fed48?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3---

    Crowdsourcing My Image SearchA couple of years ago (probably five to six years) I was reading an article and came across an image. The image was very interesting and caught my attention immediately. It was an original picture of group of people who were waiting in a queue to get to the sales counter. They had self organised themselves in a such way so that the the sales counter was visible each and every person in the group. I have made rough sketch of the original image(top view). I am bad at creative pursuits, so bear with me and here is the image.Visible Counter OptimisationI have sketched the table and chair near the counter, people standing in queue near the sales counter. Circle represent the head of the person standing and the shape around circle represents shoulders as visible (...)

    #crowdsource-image-search #learning #image-search

  • How To Write The Best Possible Job Spec
    https://hackernoon.com/how-to-write-the-best-possible-job-spec-686a1a40653?source=rss----3a8144

    The job spec is a key component of every #search process―but often, it’s overlooked.The reason is, recruiters tend to think of the job spec as a simple, straightforward task―a box that needs to be checked and dismissed. In reality, though, the job spec has to accomplish two difficult things: it needs to accurately describe the role and adequately intrigue potential candidates.But even if it’s not always overlooked, this is a step that’s still too often rushed through. The unintended result is that recruiters end up less equipped to go out and do what they’ve been hired to do: find and land the most qualified candidates.Here’s why the job spec is so important―and how to go about writing an excellent one.Creating the job spec benefits you as a recruiter because you’re able to get from your (...)

    #executive-search-firms #job-spec #recruiting

  • Everything you need to know about Google Knowledge Graph and how to get included
    https://hackernoon.com/everything-you-need-to-know-about-google-knowledge-graph-and-how-to-get-

    Google Knowledge Graph is an innovative tool that enables users to discover your business and contact you without even clicking on your webpage. Interesting? Let’s learn more about it in detail.If you’re looking to enhance your brand’s visibility online and provide users with relevant information about your business while giving them a great search experience, Google’s Knowledge Graph is here to make that possible for you.Somewhere in 2012, Google announced the unveiling of the Knowledge Graph, a tool which collates all the facts about people, places, and things to create interconnected search results and present them in form of useful answers and not just links. And this is helping Google achieve its mission to organize the world’s information and make it accessible to its users anytime and (...)

    #google-knowledge-graph #seo #search-engine-marketing #google-knowledge #google-analytics

  • 10 Best #search Tool Extensions In Chrome Web Store
    https://hackernoon.com/10-best-search-tool-extensions-in-chrome-web-store-286262a741b1?source=r

    Here’s a list of top Chrome Extensions in the Chrome Web Store in the Search Tool category. These extensions will help to improve your search experience and can help you find information faster and more easily than with traditional search engines.Ecosia — The Search Engine That Plants TreesRating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Description: This extension sets your search engine to Ecosia and customizes your new tab page so you can plant trees with every search.This extension sets Ecosia as your default search engine in Chrome, allowing you to search directly from the address bar of your browser. It also customizes your new tab page. By using it you can help the environment for free - just by searching the web.Ecosia - The search engine that plants treesSearch Encrypt — The Private Search EngineRating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Description: (...)

    #chrome-extension #search-tool-extension #google #search-engines

  • What is Search Neutrality?
    https://hackernoon.com/what-is-search-neutrality-d05cc30c6b3e?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3---4

    Is Your Search Engine Biased?Search neutrality is the idea that a search engine does not limit or influence a person’s ability to access information on the #internet. The search engine market is very one sided with just a couple companies controlling the entire market.“Search neutrality is a principle that search engines should have no editorial policies other than that their results be comprehensive, impartial and based solely on relevance. This means that when a user queries a search engine, the engine should return the most relevant results found in the provider’s domain (those sites which the engine has knowledge of), without manipulating the order of the results (except to rank them by relevance), excluding results, or in any other way manipulating the results to a certain bias.” (...)

    #search-engines #google #search-neutrality #net-neutrality