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Jack Dorsey Departs Bluesky

Jack Dorsey is no longer on the board of Bluesky, the Twitter alternative he helped start. The announcement comes shortly after Dorsey unfollowed all but three accounts on X and referred to Elon Musk's platform as "freedom technology." The Verge reports: In two posts today, Bluesky thanked Dorsey while confirming his departure and adding that it's searching for a new board member "who shares our commitment to building a social network that puts people in control of their experience." [...] Neither Bluesky nor Dorsey himself seem to have said how or why he left the board. For now, two board members remain: CEO, Jay Graeber, and Jabber / XMPP inventor Jeremie Miller. Dorsey originally backed Bluesky in 2019 as a project to develop an open-source social media standard that he wanted Twitter to move to. He later joined its board of directors when it split from Twitter in 2022.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Grèves, stations de métro fermées... le point sur les transports durant le pont de l’Ascension

Les Français vont être nombreux à profiter de ces quelques jours de pause du 8 au 12 mai. Mais gare aux perturbations qui pourraient gâcher ce moment suspendu.

© JackF - stock.adobe.com / Iakov Filimonov

Certaines rames de métro, le RER A et plusieurs compagnies aériennes pourraient être perturbés durant ce long week-end de l’Ascension.

Journées longues et fatigantes, enfants à faire garder… La semaine en quatre jours loin d’être adaptée à la majorité des salariés

Dans l’absolu, cette mesure intéresse la moitié des salariés, révèle une enquête Adecco-Crédoc. Mais face aux contraintes que cela implique, peu de salariés qui l’ont expérimentée la prolongent.

© Nassorn / stock.adobe.com

La semaine en quatre jours provoque un allongement du temps de travail quotidien.

Could Better Data Protections Reduce Big Tech's Polarizing Power?

"What if the big tech companies achieved their ultimate business goal — maximizing engagement on their platforms — in a way that has undermined our ability to function as an open society?" That's the question being asked by Chuck Todd, chief political analyst for NBC News: What if they realized that when folks agree on a solution to a problem, they are most likely to log off a site or move on? It sure looks like the people at these major data-hoarding companies have optimized their algorithms to do just that. As a new book argues, Big Tech appears to have perfected a model that has created rhetorical paralysis. Using our own data against us to create dopamine triggers, tech platforms have created "a state of perpetual disagreement across the divide and a concurrent state of perpetual agreement within each side," authors Frank McCourt and Michael Casey write, adding: "Once this uneasy state of divisive 'equilibrium' is established, it creates profit-making opportunities for the platforms to generate revenue from advertisers who prize the sticky highly engaged audiences it generates." In their new book, "Our Biggest Fight," McCourt (a longtime businessman and onetime owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers) and Casey are attempting a call to action akin to Thomas Paine's 18th century-era "Common Sense." The book argues that "we must act now to embed the core values of a free, democratic society in the internet of tomorrow." The authors believe many of the current ills in society can be traced to how the internet works. "Information is the lifeblood of any society, and our three-decade-old digital system for distributing it is fatally corrupt at its heart," they write. "It has failed to function as a trusted, neutral exchange of facts and ideas and has therefore catastrophically hindered our ability to gather respectfully to debate, to compromise and to hash out solutions.... Everything, ultimately, comes down to our ability to communicate openly and truthfully with one another. We have lost that ability — thanks to how the internet has evolved away from its open, decentralized ideals...." Ultimately, what the authors are imagining is a new internet that essentially flips the user agreement 180 degrees, so that a tech company has to agree to your terms and conditions to use your data and has to seek your permission (perhaps with compensation) to access your entire social map of whom and what you engage with on the internet. Most important, under such an arrangement, these companies couldn't prevent you from using their services if you refused to let them have your data... Unlike most anti-Big Tech books, this one isn't calling for the breakup of companies like Meta, Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft or Apple. Instead, it's calling for a new set of laws that protect data so none of those companies gets to own it, either specifically or in the aggregate... The authors seem mindful that this Congress or a new one isn't going to act unless the public demands action. And people may not demand this change in our relationship with tech if they don't have an alternative to point to. That's why McCourt, through an organization he founded called Project Liberty, is trying to build our new internet with new protocols that make individual data management a lot easier and second nature. (If you want to understand the tech behind this new internet more, read the book!) Wait, there's more. The article adds that the authors "envision an internet where all apps and the algorithms that power them are open source and can be audited at will. They believe that simply preventing these private companies from owning and mapping our data will deprive them of the manipulative marketing and behavioral tactics they've used to derive their own power and fortunes at the expense of democracy." And the NBC News analyst seems to agree. "For whatever reason, despite our societal fear of government databases and government surveillance, we've basically handed our entire personas to the techies of Silicon Valley."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Is Mastodon's Link-Previewing Overloading Servers?

The blog Its FOSS has 15,000 followers for its Mastodon account — which they think is causing problems: When you share a link on Mastodon, a link preview is generated for it, right? With Mastodon being a federated platform (a part of the Fediverse), the request to generate a link preview is not generated by just one Mastodon instance. There are many instances connected to it who also initiate requests for the content almost immediately. And, this "fediverse effect" increases the load on the website's server in a big way. Sure, some websites may not get overwhelmed with the requests, but Mastodon does generate numerous hits, increasing the load on the server. Especially, if the link reaches a profile with more followers (and a broader network of instances)... We tried it on our Mastodon profile, and every time we shared a link, we were able to successfully make our website unresponsive or slow to load. Slashdot reader nunojsilva is skeptical that "blurbs with a thumbnail and description" could create the issue (rather than, say, poorly-optimized web content). But the It's Foss blog says they found three GitHub issues about the same problem — one from 2017, and two more from 2023. And other blogs also reported the same issue over a year ago — including software developer Michael Nordmeyer and legendary Netscape programmer Jamie Zawinski. And back in 2022, security engineer Chris Partridge wrote: [A] single roughly ~3KB POST to Mastodon caused servers to pull a bit of HTML and... an image. In total, 114.7 MB of data was requested from my site in just under five minutes — making for a traffic amplification of 36704:1. [Not counting the image.] Its Foss reports Mastodon's official position that the issue has been "moved as a milestone for a future 4.4.0 release. As things stand now, the 4.4.0 release could take a year or more (who knows?)." They also state their opinion that the issue "should have been prioritized for a faster fix... Don't you think as a community-powered, open-source project, it should be possible to attend to a long-standing bug, as serious as this one?"

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Pour les JO 2024, Airbnb s'engage à lutter contre la prostitution dans ses hébergements

La plateforme de location s'est engagée à sensibiliser sa communauté d'hébergeurs et de voyageurs face à des incidents qui restent «très rares au regard du volume de réservations opérées».

© Dado Ruvic / REUTERS

Cette convention a été conclue avec la Mission interministérielle pour la protection des femmes contre les violences et la lutte contre la traite des êtres humains.

«Le bois, ça me parle» : ces cadres qui quittent leurs fichiers Excel pour laisser libre cours à leur créativité

ENQUÊTE - Un projet de reconversion est non seulement une affaire de détermination, d'amour du travail bien fait, de préparation, mais aussi parfois de sacrifices.

© Greg Epperson / Greg Epperson - stock.adobe.com

Un expert-comptable devenu céramiste, ou une responsable communication reconvertie en ébéniste : si elles restent atypiques, de telles trajectoires professionnelles ne surprennent plus vraiment.

Accord sur les préretraites à la SNCF : jugeant le texte «pas satisfaisant», Le Maire convoque le PDG

«Il y a eu un dysfonctionnement», a critiqué le ministre de l’Économie, estimant qu'il aurait dû, comme ministre de tutelle de l'entreprise, être mis au courant au préalable des intentions de la direction.

© ALAIN JOCARD / AFP

Le ministre, comme nombre de membres de l'opposition de droite, a eu des mots durs sur les équilibres finaux du texte.

Dave & Buster's To Allow Customers To Bet On Arcade Games

Arcade giant Dave & Buster's said it will begin allowing customers to bet on arcade games. "Customers can soon make a friendly $5 wager on a Hot Shots basketball game, a bet on a Skee-Ball competition or on another arcade game," reports CNBC. "The betting function, expected to launch in the next few months, will work through the company's app." From the report: Dave & Buster's, started in 1982, now has more than 222 venues in North America, offering everything from bowling to laser tag, plus virtual reality. The company says it has five million loyalty members and 30 million unique visitors to its locations each year. The company's stock is up more than 50% over the past year. As a boom in betting increases engagement among sports fans, digital gamification could have a similar effect within Dave & Buster's customer base by allowing loyalty members to compete with one another and earn rewards. Ultimately, it could mean people spend more time and money at the venues. Dave and Buster's is using technology by gamification software company Lucra. [...] Lucra and Dave & Buster's said there will be a limit placed on the size of bets it will allow, but that they're not publicly disclosing that threshold just yet. Lucra said across its history the average bet size has been $10. "We're creating a new form of kind of a digital experience for folks inside of these ecosystems," said Madding, Lucra's chief operating officer. "We're getting them to engage in a new way and spend more time and money," he added. Lucra says its skills-based games are not subject to the same licenses and regulations gambling operators face with games of chance. Lucra is careful not to use the term "bet" or "wager" to describe its games. "We use real-money contests or challenges," Madding said. Lucra's contests are only available to players age 18 and older. The contests are available in 44 states.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

«C’est une perte de temps chaque jour» : avec la fermeture prolongée de l’A13, la colère monte chez les automobilistes

Des dizaines de milliers de conducteurs sont obligés de se tourner vers les itinéraires bis de la N118 ou de l’A14 pour rejoindre la capitale. Seulement, le premier est saturé et le deuxième payant.

© MIGUEL MEDINA / AFP

L'A13 est un axe emprunté par près de 100.000 personnes chaque jour dans les deux sens.

What Happened After India Banned TikTok?

What happened after India banned TikTok? The move "mostly drew widespread support" notes the Associated Press, in a country "where protesters had been calling for a boycott of Chinese goods since the deadly confrontation in the remote Karakoram mountain border region." "There was a clamour leading up to this, and the popular narrative was how can we allow Chinese companies to do business in India when we're in the middle of a military standoff," said Nikhil Pahwa, a digital policy expert and founder of tech website MediaNama. Just months before the ban, India had also restricted investment from Chinese companies, Pahwa added. "TikTok wasn't a one-off case. Today, India has banned over 500 Chinese apps to date." At the time, India had about 200 million TikTok users. And the company also employed thousands of Indians. TikTok users and content creators, however, needed a place to go — and the ban provided a multi-billion dollar opportunity to snatch up a big market. Within months, Google rolled out YouTube Shorts and Instagram pushed out its Reels feature. Both mimicked the short-form video creation that TikTok had excelled at. "And they ended up capturing most of the market that TikTok had vacated," said Pahwa. TikTok is also banned in Nepal and Somalia, according to Mashable, and the Associaterd Press adds that it's now also banned in Pakistan, Nepal and Afghanistan "and restricted in many countries in Europe." Their article concludes that "for the most part, content creators and users in the four years since the ban have moved on to other platforms." They quote one frequent TikTok user as saying they just switched to Instagram after the ban, and "It wasn't really a big deal."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Efficace, gratuit et peu engageant... L’immersion professionnelle, un outil de retour à l’emploi plébiscité par les chômeurs et les patrons

RÉCIT - Ces stages, développés par France Travail, permettent à un demandeur de découvrir de nouveaux métiers, et aux chefs d’entreprise de tester la motivation d’un candidat en reconversion.

© Thomas Engrand/ Le Figaro

Anciennement prothésiste ongulaire, Delphine s’essaie au métier de vendeuse en boulangerie.

«Je ne crois pas qu'il y aura de grève pendant les Jeux olympiques», anticipe Stanislas Guerini

Malgré les préavis de grève déposés par la CGT et Force Ouvrière, le ministre affirme que les 100.000 agents de la Fonction publique impliqués dans l’organisation des Jeux seront «extraordinairement mobilisés» pendant cette période.

© BERTRAND GUAY / AFP

Stanislas Guerini assure vouloir «accompagner» les agents publics impliqués dans l'organisation des JO, avec par exemple «des places en crèche, des chèques emploi service universel», en plus des primes.

100 millions d'euros de prêts, stockage de l’eau, plan Écophyto… Des nouvelles mesures de l’exécutif envers les agriculteurs

En déplacement dans la Manche, le premier ministre Gabriel Attal dévoilera cet après-midi ce panel de mesure pensé pour apaiser définitivement la colère agricole qui gronde depuis janvier.

© CHRISTOPHE PETIT TESSON / AFP

Emmanuel Macron, entouré du ministre de l'Agriculture Marc Fesneau, s'entretient avec des agriculteurs français membres des syndicats agricoles lors de la journée d'ouverture du 60e Salon international de l'agriculture, à Paris, le 24 février 2024.

«Un sacré braquage» : ces très secrètes négociations entre la DGAC et les contrôleurs aériens qui ont permis d’éloigner les menaces de grève

ENQUÊTE - Primes, congés, revalorisations... Dans l’ombre des tours de contrôles, le syndicat majoritaire essaie de faire adopter ses revendications. Le silence règne autour de l’avancée des discussions, pourtant déjà bien engagées.

© ERIC PIERMONT / AFP

Les contrôleurs aériens, qui réalisent en moyenne des semaines de 32 heures, sont régulièrement pointés du doigt pour leurs conditions de travail très avantageuses.
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