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David Larlet hace 4 años
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*(Savoir) vivre dans un panoptique numérique.*

Le plus triste est peut-être d’avoir réussi à compiler tous ces liens sur les <abbr title="Google Apple Facebook Amazon Microsoft et compagnie">GAFAM+</abbr> en moins d’un mois.

.. include:: fragments/Make them dance.md
.. include:: fragments/Evil.md
.. include:: fragments/Mood.md
.. include:: fragments/Normalized.md

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<hr>

<p><em>(Savoir) vivre dans un panoptique numérique.</em></p>
<p>Le plus triste est peut-être d’avoir réussi à compiler tous ces liens sur les <abbr title="Google Apple Facebook Amazon Microsoft et compagnie">GAFAM+</abbr> en moins d’un mois.</p>
<h2 id="make-them-dance">Make them dance <a href="#make-them-dance" title="Ancre vers cette partie">#</a></h2><blockquote>
<p>Unequal knowledge about us produces unequal power over us, and so epistemic inequality widens to include the distance between what we can do and what can be done to us. Data scientists describe this as the shift from monitoring to actuation, in which a critical mass of knowledge about a machine system enables the remote control of that system. Now people have become targets for remote control, as surveillance capitalists discovered that the most predictive data come from intervening in behavior to tune, herd and modify action in the direction of commercial objectives. This third imperative, “economies of action,” has become an arena of intense experimentation. “We are learning how to write the music,” one scientist said, “and then we let the music make them dance.”</p>
<p><cite><em><a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/24/opinion/sunday/surveillance-capitalism.html">You Are Now Remotely Controlled</a></em> (<a href="/david/cache/2020/f45cdbe527b4c4acead78cef9e4d533f/">cache</a>)</cite></p>
</blockquote>
<p>Le plus triste est peut-être d’avoir réussi à compiler tous ces liens sur les <abbr title="Google Apple Facebook Amazon Microsoft et compagnie">GAFAM+</abbr> en moins d’un mois. Et je ne parle même pas des failles de sécurité qui sont toutes plus cocasses <a href="https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/dygy8k/researchers-find-anonymized-data-is-even-less-anonymous-than-we-thought">les unes</a> (<a href="/david/cache/2020/efc69100e48d4016a6e167797da7ee13/">cache</a>) que <a href="https://mashable.com/article/google-photos-videos-glitch/">les autres</a> (<a href="/david/cache/2020/3146f1a5743de3217adc3bc854897aaf/">cache</a>).</p>
<h2 id="evil">Evil <a href="#evil" title="Ancre vers cette partie">#</a></h2><blockquote>
<p>The tech industry doesn’t intoxicate us like it did just a few years ago. Keeping up with its problems—and its fixes, and its fixes that cause new problems—is dizzying. Separating out the meaningful threats from the noise is hard. Is Facebook really the danger to democracy it looks like? Is Uber really worse than the system it replaced? Isn’t Amazon’s same-day delivery worth it? Which harms are real and which are hypothetical? Has the techlash gotten it right? And which of these companies is really the worst? Which ones might be, well, evil?</p>
<p><cite><em><a href="https://slate.com/technology/2020/01/evil-list-tech-companies-dangerous-amazon-facebook-google-palantir.html">Which tech companies are doing the most harm?</a></em> (<a href="/david/cache/2020/566b71b4e3a0217d7a224f71aa255a35/">cache</a>)</cite></p>

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## Make them dance

> Unequal knowledge about us produces unequal power over us, and so epistemic inequality widens to include the distance between what we can do and what can be done to us. Data scientists describe this as the shift from monitoring to actuation, in which a critical mass of knowledge about a machine system enables the remote control of that system. Now people have become targets for remote control, as surveillance capitalists discovered that the most predictive data come from intervening in behavior to tune, herd and modify action in the direction of commercial objectives. This third imperative, “economies of action,” has become an arena of intense experimentation. “We are learning how to write the music,” one scientist said, “and then we let the music make them dance.”
>
> <cite>*[You Are Now Remotely Controlled](https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/24/opinion/sunday/surveillance-capitalism.html)* ([cache](/david/cache/2020/f45cdbe527b4c4acead78cef9e4d533f/))</cite>

Le plus triste est peut-être d’avoir réussi à compiler tous ces liens sur les <abbr title="Google Apple Facebook Amazon Microsoft et compagnie">GAFAM+</abbr> en moins d’un mois. Et je ne parle même pas des failles de sécurité qui sont toutes plus cocasses [les unes](https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/dygy8k/researchers-find-anonymized-data-is-even-less-anonymous-than-we-thought) ([cache](/david/cache/2020/efc69100e48d4016a6e167797da7ee13/)) que [les autres](https://mashable.com/article/google-photos-videos-glitch/) ([cache](/david/cache/2020/3146f1a5743de3217adc3bc854897aaf/)).

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<link href="https://larlet.fr/david/" rel="alternate" type="text/html" />
<link href="https://larlet.fr/david/log/" rel="self" />
<id>https://larlet.fr/david/</id>
<updated>2020-02-04T12:00:00+01:00</updated>
<updated>2020-02-05T12:00:00+01:00</updated>
<author>
<name>David Larlet</name>
<uri>https://larlet.fr/david/</uri>

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