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edabou

Daniel Lemire's blog - Daniel Lemire is a computer science professor at the University ... - 4 views

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    Article about computer sciences and social media
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    Science and Technology links (January 16th 2021) You can tell people's political affiliation by image recognition technology.
hbaiebhana

Covid-19: US Energy Department assesses virus likely resulted from lab leak, furthering... - 0 views

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    Le Département de l'énergie est la première source de données et de science médicale sur les pandémies.
carinecroteau

It's not kids' screen time you should worry about - it's yours - The European Sting - C... - 0 views

  • It’s not kids’ screen time you should worry about – it’s yours
  • Emerging research is starting to look at the role that parents’ screen usage has on a child’s development, and the news isn’t good.
    • carinecroteau
       
      Point de vue intéressant.
  • children’s development is being harmed because their parents are constantly distracted by technology.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • unwittingly likely to increase the bad behaviour and tantrums that youngsters often rely on to get attention
  • Children learned the word when the teaching was not interrupted, but when the interaction was interrupted, they didn’t learn the word.
  • The vocal patterns parents everywhere tend to adopt during exchanges with infants and toddlers are marked by a higher-pitched tone, simplified grammar, and engaged, exaggerated enthusiasm. Though this talk is cloying to adult observers, babies can’t get enough of it. Not only that: One study showed that infants exposed to this interactive, emotionally responsive speech style at 11 months and 14 months knew twice as many words at age 2 as ones who weren’t exposed to it,” she writes.
  • Perhaps more alarmingly, Christakis also points out that distracted parents put their children in danger.
    • carinecroteau
       
      Mettons nous inconsciemment nos enfants en danger?
anonymous

Brett Kavanaugh and the Information Terrorists Trying to Reshape America | WIRED - 0 views

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    Article de fond sur la force du "terrorisme de l'information" des dernières années. "The network architecture built in Gamergate helped propel Trump to the presidency and fuel conspiracies like Pizzagate and QAnon. Now it's backing Brett Kavanaugh."
travelmaniac

Where do people get their news? - Oxford University - Medium - 0 views

  • social media (25%)
  • 2 percent of the UK population who has access to the internet
    • travelmaniac
       
      vs 91% in Canada
  • elevision is still important, but people spend more time with digital media,
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • turn to digital media for news and politics
    • travelmaniac
       
      Vraiment important : les médias sociaux avaient pour vocation initiale le désir de partage d'information entre groupes. Ce même médium est maintenant de plus en plus utilisé comme source d'information.
  • where traditional media like broadcasters and newspapers are still very important producers of news, but where many people increasingly find their news via search engines and social media.
  • people who get news via search engines and/or social media sites report using significantly more different sources of news than those who do not.
    • travelmaniac
       
      la question est surtout de savoir quelles sont les sources d'information qui sont choisies, pas uniquement combien...
anonymous

Shirky: Ontology is Overrated -- Categories, Links, and Tags - 1 views

  • I want to convince you that many of the ways we're attempting to apply categorization to the electronic world are actually a bad fit, because we've adopted habits of mind that are left over from earlier strategies.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      need of novelty
  • because it is both widely used and badly overrated in terms of its value in the digital world.
  • ...25 more annotations...
  • Yahoo is saying "We understand better than you how the world is organized, because we are trained professionals. So if you mistakenly think that Books and Literature are entertainment, we'll put a little flag up so we can set you right, but to see those links, you have to 'go' to where they 'are'."
  • You don't have to have just a few links, you could have a whole lot of links.
  • A URL can only appear in three places. That's the Yahoo rule.
  • They missed the end of this progression, which is that, if you've got enough links, you don't need the hierarchy anymore. There is no shelf. There is no file system. The links alone are enough.
  • One reason Google was adopted so quickly when it came along is that Google understood there is no shelf, and that there is no file system. Google can decide what goes with what after hearing from the user, rather than trying to predict in advance what it is you need to know.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      Laisser les usagers se faire leur langage et le tagger à leur façon puis, en tant que Google, prendre cette info et l'utiliser pour créer une ''taxonomie''.
  • "Well, that's going to be a useful category, we should encode that in advance."
  • They point to the signal loss from the fact that users, although they use these three different labels, are talking about the same thing.
  • You can also turn that list around. You can say "Here are some characteristics where ontological classification doesn't work well": Domain Large corpus No formal categories Unstable entities Unrestricted entities No clear edges Participants Uncoordinated users Amateur users Naive catalogers No Authority
  • The other big problem is that predicting the future turns out to be hard, and yet any classification system meant to be stable over time puts the categorizer in the position of fortune teller.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      ne pas prévoir d'avance
  • Here is del.icio.us, Joshua Shachter's social bookmarking service. It's for people who are keeping track of their URLs for themselves, but who are willing to share globally a view of what they're doing, creating an aggregate view of all users' bookmarks, as well as a personal view for each user.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      chouette description concrète de l'utilisation de del.icio.us!
  • " If you find a way to make it valuable to individuals to tag their stuff, you'll generate a lot more data about any given object than if you pay a professional to tag it once and only once.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      utilité du tagging
  • Tags are simply labels for URLs, selected to help the user in later retrieval of those URLs. Tags have the additional effect of grouping related URLs together. There is no fixed set of categories or officially approved choices. You can use words, acronyms, numbers, whatever makes sense to you, without regard for anyone else's needs, interests, or requirements.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      Chouette description de ''Tags''.
  • The chart shows a great variability in tagging strategies among the various users.
  • But this is what organization looks like when you turn it over to the users -- many different strategies, each of which works in its own context, but which can also be merged.
  • We are moving away from binary categorization -- books either are or are not entertainment
  • But they either had no way of reflecting that debate or they decided not to expose it to the users. What instead happened was it became an all-or-nothing categorization, "This is entertainment, this is not entertainment." We're moving away from that sort of absolute declaration, and towards being able to roll up this kind of value by observing how people handle it in practice.
  • What you do instead is you try to find ways that the individual sense-making can roll up to something which is of value in aggregate, but you do it without an ontological goal.
  • you believe that we make sense of the world, if we are, from a bunch of different points of view, applying some kind of sense to the world
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      ''we make sens of the world together thru what's worth aggregating'' = not ontology 
  • we're going to be able to build alternate organizational systems, systems that, like the Web itself, do a better job of letting individuals create value for one another, often without realizing it.
  • If you think the movies and cinema people were going to have a fight, wait til you get the queer politics and homosexual agenda people in the same room.
    • Marie-Noëlle Therrien
       
      ¸Bel exemple pour démontrer la problématique.
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    Un article de Clay Shirky qui nous donne son analyse de l'Ontologie, un point de vue intéressant sur les différentes façons de classer l'information sur le Web.
anonymous

Bernie Sanders Can Win, But He Isn't Polling Like A Favorite | FiveThirtyEight - 0 views

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    Analyse statistique des problèmes que subit la campagne de Bernie Sanders pour la présidentielle américaine - FiveThirtyEight
courtemanchema

Warren Dares Facebook With Intentionally False Political Ad - 0 views

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    Selon Elizabeth Warren Facebook est responsable de plusieurs pratiques déloyales et compromet la vie privée.
dave_carrier

Facebook Launches New Research Project to Assess the Impact of Social Media Engagement ... - 1 views

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    Le poids politique des médias sociaux est encore méconnu. L'impact social des messages et nouvelles partisanes relayées sur les plateformes est un sujet d'étude complexe. Le respect de la vie privée et le consentement des usagers sont au cœur du problème. Facebook rassemble les conditions pour mener une étude d'envergure à l'occasion des présidentielles Américaines 2020.
piche22

Algorithms: Public sector urged to be open about role in decision-making - 0 views

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    Comment cette réalité ce transpose t'elle dans le contexte des réseaux sociaux ? Quelle part est accordée aux algorithme dans la prise de décision entourant les réseaux sociaux aujourd'hui ?
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