• SFR : Pages Perso - Fermeture
    https://www.sfr.fr/fermeture-des-pages-perso.html#desproges

    Au mois de mars 2016 les dirigeants de SFR Group font savoir à leurs clients que leur FAI n’rien mais alors vraimenr rien à foutre de leurs idées et envies d’expression personnelle. Allez vous faire enc... par les Marc Z. du monde leurs disent-ils en ne conservant des milliers de pages personnelles que cette preuve de l’arrogance et de la myopie propres aux détenteurs des fortunes immenses venues replacer le pouvoir absolu des dieux sur terre.

    Depuis le monde ressemble de plus en plus à la carte de la Gaule sur la première page des bande dessinées Astérix où les troupes de Jules Z. encerclent le village breton habité par des réfractaires rendus invincibles par leur potion magique qu’on connaît sous sa désignation logiciel libre FLOSS. L’allusion à la zone libre pendant l’occupation allemande nazie trouve un nouveau sens à l’époque des privatisations imposées par les présidents néolibéraux français qui ne sont plus que des préfets représentant le capital qu’il soit de souche, outre-Atlantique ou bien outre-Rhin.

    Le service de Pages Perso SFR est fermé depuis le 21/11/2016

    Les utilisateurs de ce service ont été prévenus par mail de cette fermeture et via des encarts d’information sur les pages de ce service, depuis le mois de mars 2016.
    Des fiches d’aide ont été mises à leur disposition pour récupérer le contenu de leurs Pages Perso SFR afin de le recréer sur un autre service de Pages Perso de leur choix.

    Depuis le 21/11/2016, date de fermeture du service, il n’est plus possible d’accéder aux Pages Perso SFR créées, ni aux interfaces de gestion et de publication de ce service.

    https://degooglisons-internet.org/en

    #internet #commerce #FLOSS #fediverse #wtf

  • Mastodon is easy and fun except when it isn’t
    https://erinkissane.com/mastodon-is-easy-and-fun-except-when-it-isnt

    28 July 2023 - After my last long post, I got into some frustrating conversations, among them one in which an open-source guy repeatedly scoffed at the idea of being able to learn anything useful from people on other, less ideologically correct networks. Instead of telling him to go fuck himself, I went to talk to about fedi experiences with people on the very impure Bluesky, where I had seen people casually talking about Mastodon being confusing and weird.

    My purpose in gathering this informal, conversational feedback is to bring voices into the “how should Mastodon be” conversation that don’t otherwise get much attention—which I do because I hope it will help designers and developers and community leaders who genuinely want Mastodon to work for more kinds of people refine their understanding of the problem space.
    what I did

    I posted a question on Bluesky (link requires a login until the site comes out of closed beta) for people who had tried/used Mastodon and bounced off, asking what had led them to slow down or leave. I got about 500 replies, which I pulled out of the API as a JSON file by tweaking a bash script a nice stranger wrote up on the spot when I asked about JSON export, and then extracted just the content of the replies themselves, with no names/usernames, IDs, or other metadata attached. Then I dumped everything into a spreadsheet, spent an hour or so figuring out what kind of summary categories made sense, and then spent a few more hours rapidly categorizing up to two reasons for each response that contained at least one thing I could identify as a reason. (I used to do things like this at a very large scale professionally, so I’m reasonably good and also aware that this is super-subjective work.)

    None of this is lab-conditions research—sorry, I meant NONE OF THIS IS LAB-CONDITIONS RESEARCH—and I hope it’s obvious that there are shaping factors at every step: I’m asking the question of people who found their way to Bluesky, which requires extra motivation during a closed beta; I heard only from people who saw my question and were motivated to answer it; I manually processed and categorized the responses.

    I didn’t agonize over any of this, because my goal here isn’t to plonk down a big pristine block of research, but to offer a conversational glimpse into what real humans—who were motivated to try not one, but at least two alternatives to Twitter—actually report about their unsatisfactory experiences on Mastodon.

    Lastly, I’ve intentionally done this work in a way that will, I hope, prove illegible and hostile to summary in media reports. It’s not for generalist reporters, it’s for the people doing the work of network and community building.

    A note on my approach to the ~data and numbers: It would be very easy to drop a bunch of precise-looking numbers here, but that would, I think, misrepresent the work: If I say that I found at least one categorizable reason in 347 individual replies, that’s true, but it sounds reassuringly sciency. The truth is more like “of the roughly 500 replies I got, about 350 offered reasons I could easily parse out.” So that’s the kind of language I’ll be using. Also, I feel like quoting short excerpts from people’s public responses is fine, but sharing out the dataset, such as it is, would be weird for several reasons, even though people with a Bluesky login can follow the same steps I did, if they want.
    got yelled at, felt bad

    The most common—but usually not the only—response, cited as a primary or secondary reason in about 75 replies—had to do with feeling unwelcome, being scolded, and getting lectured. Some people mentioned that they tried Mastodon during a rush of people out of Twitter and got what they perceived as a hostile response.

    About half of the people whose primary or secondary reasons fit into this category talked about content warnings, and most of those responses pointed to what they perceived as unreasonable—or in several cases anti-trans or racist—expectations for content warnings. Several mentioned that they got scolded for insufficient content warnings by people who weren’t on their instance. Others said that their fear of unintentionally breaking CW expectations or other unwritten rules of fedi made them too anxious to post, or made posting feel like work.

    Excerpts:

    Feels like you need to have memorized robert’s rules of the internet to post, and the way apparently cherished longtimers get hostile to new people
    i wanted to post about anti-trans legislation, but the non-US people would immediately complain that US politics needed to be CWed because it “wasn’t relevant”
    I don’t know where all the many rules for posting are documented for each instance, you definitely aren’t presented them in the account creation flow, and it seems like you have to learn them by getting bitched at
    Constantly being told I was somewhat dim because I didn’t understand how to do things or what the unwritten rules were.
    I posted a request for accounts to follow, the usual sort of thing, who do you like, who is interesting, etc. What I got was a series of TED Talks about how people like me were everything that was wrong with social media.
    sooooooo much anxiety around posting. i was constantly second-guessing what needed to be hidden behind a CW
    the fact that even on a science server, we were being badgered to put bug + reptile stuff behind a CW when many of our online presences are literally built around making these maligned animals seem cool and friendly was the last straw for me

    What I take from this: There obviously are unwelcoming, scoldy people on Mastodon, because those people are everywhere. I think some of the scolding—and less hostile but sometimes overwhelming rules/norms explanation—is harder to deal with on Mastodon than other places because the people doing the scolding/explaining believe they have the true network norms on their side. Realistically, cross-instance attempts to push people to CW non-extreme content are a no-go at scale and punish the most sensitive and anxious new users the most. Within most instances, more explicit rules presented in visible and friendly ways would probably help a lot.

    In my experience, building cultural norms into the tooling is much more effective and less alienating than chiding. The norm of using alt-text for images would be best supported by having official and third-party tools prompt for missing alt-text—and offer contextual help for what makes good alt text—right in the image upload feature. Similarly, instances with unusual CW norms would probably benefit from having cues built into their instance’s implementation of the core Mastodon software so that posters could easily see a list of desired CWs (and rationales) from the posting interface itself, though that wouldn’t help those using third-party apps. The culture side of onboarding is also an area that can benefit from some automation, as with bots on Slack or Discord that do onboarding via DM and taggable bots that explain core concepts on demand.
    couldn’t find people or interests, people didn’t stay

    A cluster of related reasons came in at #2, poor discoverability/difficulty finding people and topics to follow, #4, missing specific interests or communities/could only find tech, and #7, felt empty/never got momentum. I am treating each group as distinct because I think they’re about subtly but importantly different things, but if I combined them, they’d easily be the largest group of all.

    It’s probably a measure of the overall technical/UX sophistication of the responding group that several people explicitly referred to “discoverability.”)

    People in the “poor discoverability” group wrote about frustration with Mastodon features: how hard it was to find people and topics they wanted to follow, including friends they believed to already be on Mastodon. They frequently also said they were confused or put off by the difficulty of the cross-server following process as secondary reasons. Several people wrote about how much they missed the positive aspects of having an algorithm help bring new voices and ideas into their feeds, including those that they wouldn’t have discovered on their own, but had come to greatly value. Another group wrote about limited or non-functional search as a blocker for finding people, and also for locating topics—especially news events or specialist conversations.

    The “missing specific interests or communities” group wrote about not finding lasting community—that the people and communities they valued most on Twitter either didn’t make it to Mastodon at all, or didn’t stick, or they couldn’t find them, leaving their social world still largely concentrated on Twitter even when they themselves made the move. Several also noted that tech conversations were easy to find on Mastodon, but other interests were much less so.

    The “felt empty” group made an effort to get onto Mastodon, and in some cases even brought people over with them, but found themselves mostly talking into a void after a few weeks when their friends bailed for networks that better met their needs.

    Excerpts:

    For me, it was that Mastodon seemed to actively discourage discoverability. One of the things I loved most about Twitter was the way it could throw things in front of me that I never would have even thought to go look for on my own.
    I feel like every time I try to follow a conversation there back to learn more about the poster I end up in a weirdly alien space, like the grocery store on the other side of town that’s laid out backwards
    It seemed like it needed to pick a crowd, rather than discover new ones. Fewer chances at serendipity.
    I also remember trying to follow instructions people posted about “simple” ways to migrate over your Twitter follows/Lists, & none of them really worked for me, & I got frustrated at how much time I was spending just trying to get things set up there so I wasn’t completely starting from scratch
    Mastodon was too isolating. And the rules made me feel like the worst poster.
    Quote-replies from good people giving funny/great information is how I decide are important follows.
    Discoverability/self promo is limited & typing out 6 hashtags is annoying. # being in the actual posts clutter things (unlike cohost/insta).
    Difficulty in finding new follows was high up for me. But even once I got that figured out, it was a pain to add new people to follow if they weren’t on my instance.
    finding people you want to follow is hard enough. Adding in the fact that if you joined the wrong server you might never find them? Made it seem not worth the trouble.
    I couldn’t really figure out how to find people and who was seeing what I posted; I was never sure if I had full visibility into that
    the chief problem was an inability to find a) my friends from Twitter who were already there and b) new friends who had similar interests, both due to the bad search function
    Just didn’t seem active enough to feel worth learning all the ins and outs.

    What I take from this: Mastodon would be much friendlier and easier to use for more people if there were obvious, easy ways to follow friends of friends (without the copy-paste-search-follow dance). Beyond making that easier, Mastodon could highlight it during onboarding.

    Making it easy to search for and find and follow people—those who haven’t opted out of being found—would also be tremendous help in letting people rebuild their networks not just when coming from elsewhere, but in the not-that-rare case of instances crashing, shutting down, or being defederated into oblivion, especially since automatic migration doesn’t always work as intended.

    Missing replies also feed into this problem, by encouraging duplicate responses instead of helping people find their way into interesting conversations and notes—a social pattern that several people mentioned as something they prize on more conversationally fluent networks.
    too confusing, too much work, too intimidating

    The next big cluster includes group #3, too confusing/too much work getting started, group #5, felt siloed/federation worked badly, and group #7, instance selection was too hard/intimidating.

    A lot of people in the responding group found the process of picking an instance, signing up, and getting set up genuinely confusing. Others understood how to do it, but found it to be too time-consuming, or too much work for an uncertain return on investment. A couple of people had so many technical errors getting signed up to their first instance that they gave up. Several mentioned that they were so flooded with tips, guides, and instructions for doing Mastodon right that it seemed even more confusing.

    Many found the idea and practice of federation to be confusing, offputting, or hostile; they cited difficulties in selecting the “right” instance and shared stories about ending up on an obviously wrong one and then losing their posts or having migration technically fail when they moved. Several explicitly used the words “silo” or “siloed” to describe how they felt trying to find people who shared their interests and also, I think crucially, people who didn’t share special interests, but who would be interesting to follow anyway. (This is obviously intimately tied to discoverability.)

    Several brought up patchwork federation and unexpected or capricious defederation. Side conversations sprang up over how difficult people found it to pigeonhole themselves into one interest or, conversely, manage multiple accounts for multiple facets of their lives.

    Excerpts:

    My Twitter friends joined various Mastodon servers that didn’t talk to each other and I gave up on trying to figure it out.
    I’m tech savvy and have found mastodon simply opaque. I’ve set up 4 accounts, each on a different server, and don’t know how to amalgamate all the people I’m following everywhere (assuming all those servers federate with each other).
    It was the thing where people had to make whole twitter threads just to explain how to sign up
    the federation model is a mess and it’s impossible to use. i’ve been using computers all day every day since the 90s and mastodon makes me question whether i’m actually good at them
    discovered I was on some kind of different continent from my friends, and could not follow them, nor they me. Immediately felt frustration and disgust and never looked back.
    I’m tech savvy and have found mastodon simply opaque. I’ve set up 4 accounts, each on a different server, and don’t know how to amalgamate all the people I’m following everywhere
    I was told picking a server didn’t matter. Then it turned out it actually mattered a great deal for discoverability. Then I’m told ‘migrating is easy’, which is just a straight up lie.
    Just 100 tiny points of friction for little return

    What I take from this: I agree with these people, and I think all fedi projects meant for a broad audience should focus on fixing these problems.
    too serious, too boring, anti-fun

    People in this category talked about a seriousness that precluded shitposting or goofiness, and a perceived pressure to stay on topic and be earnest at all times.

    It felt like the LinkedIn version of Twitter - just didn’t have any fun there
    It feels overly earnest and humorless — I don’t consider myself a particularly weird or ironic poster but I want some of those people around saying funny stuff, you know?
    And in the occasional moments where I do feel like being a little silly & humorous, I want to be in a crowd that will accept that side of me rather than expecting a constant performance of seriousness!
    it just didn’t have as much fun or joy as early Twitter and Bluesky
    ultimately, I just bounced off of the culture, because it wasn’t banter-y and fun. It feels too much like eating your vegetables.

    What I take from this: Honestly, I think this is the most obvious culture clash category and is less something that needs to be directly addressed and more something that will ease with both growth and improved discoverability, which will help people with compatible social styles find each other. I think the other piece of this is probably the idea of organizing people into interest-based instances, which I think is fundamentally flawed, but that’s a subject for another time.
    complicated high-stakes decisions

    There’s a meta conversation that is probably unavoidable, and that I’d rather have head-on than in side conversations. It’s about what we should let people have, and it shapes the discourse (and product decisions) about features like quote posts, search, and custom feeds/algorithms—things that are potentially central in addressing some of the problems people raised in their replies to my question on Bluesky.

    Broadly speaking, in the landscape around and outside of the big corporate networks, there are two schools of thought about these kinds of potentially double-edged features.

    The first, which I’ll call Health First, prefers to omit the features and affordances that are associated with known or potential antisocial uses. So: no quote-posts or search because they increase the attack surface afforded to griefers and nurture the viral dynamics that drive us all into a sick frenzy elsewhere. No custom algorithms because algorithms have been implemented on especially Facebook and YouTube in ways that have had massive and deeply tragic effects, including literal genocide affecting a million adults and children in Myanmar whose lives are no less real than yours or mine.

    The second, which I’ll call Own Your Experience, states that people, not software, are responsible for networked harms, and places the burden of responsible use on the individual and the cultural mechanisms through which prosocial behavior is encouraged and antisocial behavior is throttled. So: yes to quote-posts and search and custom feeds, and just block or defederate anyone using them to do already banned things, like harassment or abuse or the kind of speech that, given the right conditions, ignites genocide.

    A thing I think about all the time is the research showing that people would literally rather self-administer painful electrical shocks than be bored. You can make the most virtuous and intentionally non-harmful network in the world, but if it doesn’t feel alive, most people will pick something worse instead.

    At their simplest, I don’t like either of these positions, though they both get some things right. The Own Your Experience school doesn’t really grapple with the genuinely terrifying dynamics of mass-scale complex systems. And I don’t think the Health First school has come to terms with the fact that in an non-authoritarian society, you can’t make people choose networks that feel like eating their vegetables over the ones that feel like candy stores. Even most people who consciously seek out ethically solid options for their online lives aren’t going to tolerate feeling isolated from most of their peers and communities, which is what happens when a network stays super niche.

    From where I stand, there are no obvious or easy answers…which means that people trying to make better online spaces and tools must deal with a lot of difficult, controversial answers.

    If I had to pick a way forward, I’d probably define a target like, “precisely calibrated and thoughtfully defanged implementations of double-edged affordances, grounded in user research and discussions with specialists in disinformation, extremist organizing, professional-grade abuse, emerging international norms in trust & safety, and algorithimic toxicity.”

    If that sounds like the opposite of fun DIY goofing around on the cozy internet, it is. Doing human networks at mass scale isn’t a baby game, as the moral brine shrimp in charge of the big networks keep demonstrating. Running online communities comes with all kinds of legal and ethical obligations, and fediverse systems are currently on the back foot with some of the most important ones (PDF).
    this post is too long, time to stop

    Right now, Mastodon is an immense achievement—a janky open-source project with great intentions that has overcome highly unfavorable odds to get to this point and is experiencing both growing pains and pressure to define its future. If I were Eugen Rochko, I would die of stress.

    I don’t know if Mastodon can grapple with the complexities of mass scale. Lots of people would prefer it didn’t—staying smaller and lower-profile makes it friendly to amateur experimentation and also a lot safer for people who need to evade various kinds of persecution. But if Mastodon and other fedi projects do take on the mass scale, their developers must consider the needs of people who aren’t already converts. That starts by asking a lot of questions and then listening closely and receptively to the answers you receive.

    #Mastodon #réseaux_sociaux #internet

  • TikTok, le roi de l’économie de l’attention
    https://lesechos.fr/tech-medias/medias/tiktok-le-roi-de-leconomie-de-lattention-1965285

    […] Un public captif et captivé de plus d’un milliard d’utilisateurs mensuels actifs qui, sans être aussi valorisé par les annonceurs qu’une audience plus mûre au pouvoir d’achat supérieur, est prisé pour sa capacité à façonner les tendances de demain. « #TikTok est devenu le point de destination d’une génération sur Internet, souligne Alexandre Mahé, de Fabernovel. De toutes les plateformes, il reste celle où l’on peut toucher l’audience la plus jeune. » Les annonceurs apprécieront cette statistique : 46 % des sondés par Kantar affirment « ne pas se laisser distraire » lorsqu’ils sont sur TikTok.

    « Temps de cerveau humain disponible »

    Car le dernier-né des réseaux a réussi une véritable prouesse : capter l’intérêt des usagers dans un univers ultra-concurrentiel dans lequel « l’abondance d’informations crée une rareté de l’#attention », comme le théorisait, en 1971, le psychologue et économiste américain Herbert A. Simon. Le concept d’« économie de l’attention » n’est pas né d’hier. En 2004, Patrick Le Lay, PDG du groupe TF1, avait déjà reconnu que son métier consistait à « vendre à Coca-Cola du temps de cerveau humain disponible ». Les géants du numérique ont encore professionnalisé l’opération.

    « Si les plateformes ont des usages multiples et proposent des fonctionnalités distinctes, leur modèle économique est sensiblement le même : il consiste à transformer le temps que nous y passons en revenus publicitaires, expose Arthur Grimonpont dans ’#Algocratie, vivre libre à l’heure des #algorithmes', paru en 2022 chez Actes Sud. De là naît une compétition redoutable pour se partager une ressource rare et précieuse : notre #temps_d'attention. »

    Et TikTok exploite mieux que quiconque ce « nouveau pétrole » grâce à son algorithme, aussi mystérieux que surperformant, qui génère un flux infini de recommandations en rapport avec les centres d’intérêt de chaque usager à partir de ses « scrolls » passés, de ses interactions, des vidéos regardées jusqu’au bout ou même visionnées plusieurs fois, etc. […]

    (Les Échos)

    #capitalisme #capitalisme_de_surveillance

  • Khrys’presso du lundi 24 juillet 2023
    https://framablog.org/2023/07/24/khryspresso-du-lundi-24-juillet-2023

    Comme chaque lundi, un coup d’œil dans le rétroviseur pour découvrir les informations que vous avez peut-être ratées la semaine dernière. Tous les liens listés ci-dessous sont a priori accessibles librement. Si ce n’est pas le cas, pensez à activer … Lire la suite­­

    #Veille #Claviers_invités #GAFAM #Internet #Revue_de_web #Revue_hebdo #Surveillance #veille #webrevue
    https://mamot.fr/system/cache/media_attachments/files/110/701/717/843/553/585/original/f77e295e7785f321.mp4


    https://mamot.fr/system/cache/media_attachments/files/110/686/077/751/477/283/original/59b67ba5863949e4.mp4

  • 📰 La newsletter #Afnic de juillet est en ligne sur http://afnic-media.fr/newsletter/20230720.html

    ➡️ Abonnez-vous pour recevoir les prochains numéros sur http://afnic.fr

    –-------------------

    📰 July edition of the #Afnic newsletter is out! Read it on http://afnic-media.fr/newsletter/20230627-english.html

    ➡️ Subscribe today to get the next ones on https://www.afnic.fr/en

    #ccTLDs #DotFR #Internet #domains #domainnames #PointFR #Internet #Numérique #InternetMadeInFrance #Afnic

  • Khrys’presso du lundi 17 juillet 2023
    https://framablog.org/2023/07/17/khryspresso-du-lundi-17-juillet-2023

    Comme chaque lundi, un coup d’œil dans le rétroviseur pour découvrir les informations que vous avez peut-être ratées la semaine dernière. Tous les liens listés ci-dessous sont a priori accessibles librement. Si ce n’est pas le cas, pensez à activer … Lire la suite­­

    #Veille #Claviers_invités #GAFAM #Internet #Revue_de_web #Revue_hebdo #Surveillance #veille #webrevue
    https://mamot.fr/system/cache/media_attachments/files/110/701/717/843/553/585/original/f77e295e7785f321.mp4


    https://mamot.fr/system/cache/media_attachments/files/110/686/077/751/477/283/original/59b67ba5863949e4.mp4

  • Rising Interest Rates Might Herald the End of the Open Internet | WIRED
    https://www.wired.com/story/rising-interest-rates-might-herald-the-end-of-the-open-internet

    Web 2.0 took off with help from the economic conditions of the 2000s. Recent moves from Reddit and Twitter signal that that era is coming to an end.

    Tim Hwang is a policy analyst and the author of Subprime Attention Crisis, a book about the global bubble of programmatic advertising. Follow him on Twitter @timhwang.

    Tianyu Fang is a writer and researcher. He was part of Chaoyang Trap, an experimental newsletter about culture and life on the Chinese internet. Follow him on Twitter @tianyuf.

    Photo-illustration: WIRED Staff; Getty Images

    The open internet once seemed inevitable. Now, as global economic woes mount and interest rates climb, the dream of the 2000s feels like it’s on its last legs. After abruptly blocking access to unregistered users at the end of last month, Elon Musk announced unprecedented caps on the number of tweets—600 for those of us who aren’t paying $8 a month—that users can read per day on Twitter. The move follows the platform’s controversial choice to restrict third-party clients back in January.

    This wasn’t a standalone event. Reddit announced in April that it would begin charging third-party developers for API calls this month. The Reddit client Apollo would have to pay more than $20 million a year under new pricing, so it closed down, triggering thousands of subreddits to go dark in protest against Reddit’s new policy. The company went ahead with its plan anyway.

    Leaders at both companies have blamed this new restrictiveness on AI companies unfairly benefitting from open access to data. Musk has said that Twitter needs rate limits because AI companies are scraping its data to train large language models. Reddit CEO Steve Huffman has cited similar reasons for the company’s decision to lock down its API ahead of a potential IPO this year.

    These statements mark a major shift in the rhetoric and business calculus of Silicon Valley. AI serves as a convenient boogeyman, but it is a distraction from a more fundamental pivot in thinking. Whereas open data and protocols were once seen as the critical cornerstone of successful internet business, technology leaders now see these features as a threat to the continued profitability of their platforms.

    It wasn’t always this way. The heady days of Web 2.0 were characterized by a celebration of the web as a channel through which data was abundant and widely available. Making data open through an API or some other means was considered a key way to increase a company’s value. Doing so could also help platforms flourish as developers integrated the data into their own apps, users enriched datasets with their own contributions, and fans shared products widely across the web. The rapid success of sites like Google Maps—which made expensive geospatial data widely available to the public for the first time—heralded an era where companies could profit through free, mass dissemination of information.

    “Information Wants To Be Free” became a rallying cry. Publisher Tim O’Reilly would champion the idea that business success in Web 2.0 depended on companies “disagreeing with the consensus” and making data widely accessible rather than keeping it private. Kevin Kelly marveled in WIRED in 2005 that “when a company opens its databases to users … [t]he corporation’s data becomes part of the commons and an invitation to participate. People who take advantage of these capabilities are no longer customers; they’re the company’s developers, vendors, skunk works, and fan base.” Investors also perceived the opportunity to generate vast wealth. Google was “most certainly the standard bearer for Web 2.0,” and its wildly profitable model of monetizing free, open data was deeply influential to a whole generation of entrepreneurs and venture capitalists.

    Of course, the ideology of Web 2.0 would not have evolved the way it did were it not for the highly unusual macroeconomic conditions of the 2000s and early 2010s. Thanks to historically low interest rates, spending money on speculative ventures was uniquely possible. Financial institutions had the flexibility on their balance sheets to embrace the idea that the internet reversed the normal laws of commercial gravity: It was possible for a company to give away its most valuable data and still get rich quick. In short, a zero interest-rate policy, or ZIRP, subsidized investor risk-taking on the promise that open data would become the fundamental paradigm of many Google-scale companies, not just a handful.

    Web 2.0 ideologies normalized much of what we think of as foundational to the web today. User tagging and sharing features, freely syndicated and embeddable links to content, and an ecosystem of third-party apps all have their roots in the commitments made to build an open web. Indeed, one of the reasons that the recent maneuvers of Musk and Huffman seem so shocking is that we have come to expect data will be widely and freely available, and that platforms will be willing to support people that build on it.

    But the marriage between the commercial interests of technology companies and the participatory web has always been one of convenience. The global campaign by central banks to curtail inflation through aggressive interest rate hikes changes the fundamental economics of technology. Rather than facing a landscape of investors willing to buy into a hazy dream of the open web, leaders like Musk and Huffman now confront a world where clear returns need to be seen today if not yesterday.

    This presages major changes ahead for the design of the internet and the rights of users. Twitter and Reddit are pioneering an approach to platform management (or mismanagement) that will likely spread elsewhere across the web. It will become increasingly difficult to access content without logging in, verifying an identity, or paying a toll. User data will become less exportable and less shareable, and there will be increasingly fewer expectations that it will be preserved. Third-parties that have relied on the free flow of data online—from app-makers to journalists—will find APIs ever more expensive to access and scraping harder than ever before.

    We should not let the open web die a quiet death. No doubt much of the foundational rhetoric of Web 2.0 is cringeworthy in the harsh light of 2023. But it is important to remember that the core project of building a participatory web where data can be shared, improved, critiqued, remixed, and widely disseminated by anyone is still genuinely worthwhile.

    The way the global economic landscape is shifting right now creates short-sighted incentives toward closure. In response, the open web ought to be enshrined as a matter of law. New regulations that secure rights around the portability of user data, protect the continued accessibility of crucial APIs to third parties, and clarify the long-ambiguous rules surrounding scraping would all help ensure that the promise of a free, dynamic, competitive internet can be preserved in the coming decade.

    For too long, advocates for the open web have implicitly relied on naive beliefs that the network is inherently open, or that web companies would serve as unshakable defenders of their stated values. The opening innings of the post-ZIRP world show how broader economic conditions have actually played the larger role in architecting how the internet looks and feels to this point. Believers in a participatory internet need to reach for stronger tools to mitigate the effects of these deep economic shifts, ensuring that openness can continue to be embedded into the spaces that we inhabit online.

    Tim Hwang est l’auteur de “Le grand krach de l’attention”
    https://cfeditions.com/krach

    #Tim_Hwang #Internet_ouvert #Open_data

  • Violences urbaines : « Les réseaux sociaux n’ont pas fait assez, et il va falloir qu’ils fassent plus » [sous peine de coupure], Thierry Breton, commissaire européen au Marché intérieur
    https://www.francetvinfo.fr/replay-radio/8h30-fauvelle-dely/livraisons-d-armes-a-l-ukraine-moderation-des-reseaux-sociaux-le-8h30-f

    « Les réseaux sociaux n’ont pas fait assez » pendant les violences urbaines qui ont suivi la mort de Nahel et « il va falloir qu’ils fassent plus », prévient Thierry Breton. « À partir du 25 août, la loi européenne va s’appliquer à ces #plateformes », indique-t-il. De ce fait, "lorsqu’il y aura des contenus haineux, des contenus qui appellent par exemple à la révolte, qui appellent également à tuer ou à brûler des voitures, elles auront l’obligation dans l’instant de les effacer".

    « Si elles ne le font pas, elles seront immédiatement sanctionnées », assure-t-il. Concrètement, « on pourra, à ce moment-là, non seulement donner une amende, mais aussi interdire l’exploitation sur notre territoire » européen. Autrement dit, #couper_les_réseaux_sociaux qui ne respectent pas la règle. « C’est la loi qui va le faire » et pas « une personne, un État, un conseil d’administration », défend-il. « Nous sommes maintenant équipés pour cela avec un conseil spécifique », précise-t-il également.

    si j’étais de bonne humeur je dirais que c’est un appel à la créativité

    #internet #information #révolte #contrôle #police #censure #coupure

  • Khrys’presso du lundi 10 juillet 2023
    https://framablog.org/2023/07/10/khryspresso-du-lundi-10-juillet-2023

    Comme chaque lundi, un coup d’œil dans le rétroviseur pour découvrir les informations que vous avez peut-être ratées la semaine dernière. Tous les liens listés ci-dessous sont a priori accessibles librement. Si ce n’est pas le cas, pensez à activer … Lire la suite­­

    #Veille #Claviers_invités #GAFAM #Internet #Revue_de_web #Revue_hebdo #Surveillance #veille #webrevue

  • Khrys’presso du lundi 3 juillet 2023
    https://framablog.org/2023/07/03/khryspresso-du-lundi-3-juillet-2023

    Comme chaque lundi, un coup d’œil dans le rétroviseur pour découvrir les informations que vous avez peut-être ratées la semaine dernière. Tous les liens listés ci-dessous sont a priori accessibles librement. Si ce n’est pas le cas, pensez à activer … Lire la suite­­

    #Veille #Claviers_invités #GAFAM #Internet #Revue_de_web #Revue_hebdo #Surveillance #veille #webrevue

  • Une vie de militant : #Pietro_Gori
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/une-vie-de-militant-pietro-gori

    Après le Congrès fameux tenu à Gênes en 1892, la rupture entre socialistes-autoritaires et anarchistes devint définitive. Ce Congrès marqua dans l’histoire du parti socialiste italien une date importante et pour le mouvement anarchiste son vrai départ. Deux orateurs se signalèrent dans la défense du point de vue anarchiste : Luigi Galleani et Pietro Gori. Ce dernier — qui avait commencé sa vie militante dans les rangs de l’Internationale, à Livourne et à Pise — prenait depuis quelques (...) #Contre-Courant_n°6_-_Juillet_1952

    / Pietro Gori, #Italie, #Contre_Courant, #Internet_Archive

    https://www.partage-noir.fr/IMG/pdf/cc_006.pdf

  • Les conquistadors de l’espace - Regarder le documentaire complet | ARTE
    https://www.arte.tv/fr/videos/105563-000-A/les-conquistadors-de-l-espace

    Alors que nos sociétés sont toujours plus dépendantes de l’#Internet à haut débit et des données transmises par #satellite, une nouvelle course à l’espace bouleverse l’équilibre géopolitique mondial. À 550 kilomètres de la Terre, l’entrepreneur américain Elon Musk déploie progressivement sa #constellation #Starlink, déjà constituée de plus de trois mille satellites destinés à apporter Internet jusqu’aux endroits les plus reculés de la planète. Mais à mesure que Musk met en place son maillage, la pression monte pour les États : laisseront-ils un acteur privé rafler la mise sur ce marché encore largement dérégulé, et menacer leur souveraineté numérique et leur indépendance technologique ? Tandis que Jeff Bezos, le PDG d’Amazon, réclame lui aussi sa part du gâteau, la Chine et l’Union européenne - avec le projet Iris, annoncé fin 2022 - se sont engagées à leur tour dans cette course.

    #espace #orbite_basse #course

  • Khrys’presso du lundi 26 juin 2023
    https://framablog.org/2023/06/26/khryspresso-du-lundi-26-juin-2023

    Comme chaque lundi, un coup d’œil dans le rétroviseur pour découvrir les informations que vous avez peut-être ratées la semaine dernière. Tous les liens listés ci-dessous sont a priori accessibles librement. Si ce n’est pas le cas, pensez à activer … Lire la suite­­

    #Veille #Claviers_invités #GAFAM #Internet #Revue_de_web #Revue_hebdo #Surveillance #veille #webrevue

  • Khrys’presso du lundi 19 juin 2023
    https://framablog.org/2023/06/19/khryspresso-du-lundi-19-juin-2023

    Comme chaque lundi, un coup d’œil dans le rétroviseur pour découvrir les informations que vous avez peut-être ratées la semaine dernière. Tous les liens listés ci-dessous sont a priori accessibles librement. Si ce n’est pas le cas, pensez à activer … Lire la suite­­

    #Veille #Claviers_invités #GAFAM #Internet #Revue_de_web #Revue_hebdo #Surveillance #veille #webrevue
    https://mamot.fr/system/media_attachments/files/110/564/919/383/695/887/original/153becc58e88b989.mp4


    https://mamot.fr/system/cache/media_attachments/files/110/561/056/529/839/397/original/0656f84504bfc6ee.mp4

  • Elimination des bons candidats face au second mandat à Tebboune en Algérie.
    http://www.argotheme.com/organecyberpresse/spip.php?article4473

    Chose invérifiable, il est dit que certains rares hauts gradés de l’armée ne soutiennent pas un second mandat à Tebboune. Mais pour la cohésion de l’état-major, ils ne peuvent exprimer leur perception en public. Ils désignent l’incompétence du raïs dans bien des domaines et les effets périlleux de ses boutades et ses décisions qui empêtrent l’Algérie dans des situations alambiquées aux effets plus déstabilisateurs qu’apaisants. L’atmosphère de dévoiement des hiérarchies judiciaires et de l’assemblée législatives, qui, les deux livrent des traques et des persécutions autocratiques contre des citoyens déjà victimes des actes des terroristes islamistes, est criard aux yeux de toute l’humanité et des partenaires... nationale, fait politique, une et première page, médias, actualité, pays, france, afrique, (...)

    #nationale,fait_politique,_une_et_première_page,_médias,_actualité,_pays,_france,_afrique,_maghreb #Maghreb,_Algérie,_Tunisie,_Maroc,_Libye,_Africa,_population,_société #Afrique,Monde_Arabe,_islam,_Maghreb,_Proche-Orient, #fait_divers,_société,_fléau,_délinquance,_religion #Journalisme,presse,_médias #Internet,_Web,_cyber-démocratie,_communication,_société,_médias #Terrorisme_,_islamisme,Al-Qaeda,politique,_

  • Le peuple autochtone baduy ne veut plus d’Internet
    https://www.courrierinternational.com/article/indonesie-le-peuple-autochtone-baduy-ne-veut-plus-d-internet

    Les Baduy, peuple autochtone vivant reclus à seulement 160 kilomètres de la capitale indonésienne, ont demandé au gouvernement de couper le réseau Internet dans la zone montagneuse de leurs villages. Selon le “Jakarta Post”, ils estiment que ce mode de communication est une menace pour leur culture ancestrale.

    (...)

    Les Baduy sont un peuple autochtone d’environ 26 000 personnes (...) Ils se divisent en deux groupes : les plus nombreux, les Baduy Luar, dits “de l’extérieur”, habitent les 61 villages qui encerclent la “terre pure”. (...)

    Les Baduy Dalam, dits “de l’intérieur”, sont moins de 2 000. Ils ont la charge de préserver leur culture animiste en veillant à ce que la modernité ne pénètre pas dans leurs trois villages sacrés qui s’étendent sur 4 000 hectares de forêts (...). En 1990, le gouvernement indonésien a déclaré leur zone d’habitation site de conservation culturelle.

    • Les autochtones d’Amérique auraient probablement pris une sage décision en gardant les premiers conquistadors à la maison, six pieds sous terre, même si sur la durée, cela n’aurait probablement pas changé grand chose au cours des événements.

    • @alexcorp : ce n’est pas comme si Ciotti ou Zemmour étaient les derniers survivants d’une culture probablement millénaire ;)
      Quant aux Baduy, ils ont péniblement survécu aux « colonisations culturelles » bouddhiste, hindouiste, musulmane et protestante, on peu comprendre qu’ils n’aient pas trop le goût de se laisser dissoudre dans la guerre virtuelle entre GAFAM et BATX.
      De plus ils n’ont pas l’air d’avoir comme projet de « renvoyer chez eux » les quelques 250 millions de musulmans indonésiens.

    • @alexcorp Je vois très bien de quoi tu parles.
      Dans le cas d’un Zemmour, d’un afficionado de la corrida, ou d’un(e) militant(e) « Un papa une maman... », l’invocation de « la culture » pour moi c’est juste une imposture sémantique.

      Non que la « culture » des baduys soit par nature plus « pure », elle a aussi obligatoirement évolué au fil des contacts avec les cultures variées qui ont participé au peuplement de l’archipel depuis quelques milliers d’années. Elle n’est qu’une des quelques rescapées des sociétés natives animistes qui préexistaient à tout ce que nous nommons « civilisations ». Sans entrer dans le relativisme culturel absolu, je considère que ces sociétés ont au moins prouvé leur adaptation sociale à leurs environnements naturels , et je crois que ça justifie qu’ils tentent de perpétuer leur mode de vie. Ils ne pourront probablement pas stopper leur dilution progressive mais ils peuvent la ralentir. J’imagine que si le gouvernement accepte de les y aider c’est parce que l’attractivité touristique de leur région nécessite la pérennité d’un minimum de pittoresque et de mystère...

  • Khrys’presso du lundi 12 juin 2023
    https://framablog.org/2023/06/12/khryspresso-du-lundi-12-juin-2023

    Comme chaque lundi, un coup d’œil dans le rétroviseur pour découvrir les informations que vous avez peut-être ratées la semaine dernière. Tous les liens listés ci-dessous sont a priori accessibles librement. Si ce n’est pas le cas, pensez à activer … Lire la suite­­

    #Veille #Claviers_invités #GAFAM #Internet #Revue_de_web #Revue_hebdo #Surveillance #veille #webrevue