Skip to main content

Home/ MesInfos/ Group items tagged apps

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Renaud Francou

New Industry Commitments to Give 15 Million Households Tools to Shrink Their Energy Bil... - 0 views

  •  
    Le "Green button" est un standard permettant de mettre à disposition des usagers leurs données de consommation énergétique, détenues par les grandes compagnies d'énergie. Largement stimulée par l'administration, celle-ci va plus loin et stimule la création d'application ("apps for energy") à destination des usagers. Le but affiché : réduire sa consommation.
marinealbarede

NHS Commissioning Board launches library of NHS-reviewed phone apps to help keep people... - 0 views

  •  
    La suite de la stratégie du NHS (National Health Service) pour que les britanniques prennent en main leur santé : une bibliothèque des applications leur permettant de suivre leur santé, des applications de Quantified Self à d'autres permettant d'accéder à ses relevés en ligne, d'autres encore permettant de partager ses plans d'assurance en ligne. 'Transparency is key, transforming access to data in health and care is central to our vision of delivering a truly patient centred NHS."
clombion

'Who Owns The Future?' Jaron Lanier thinks Google and the government should pay for you... - 0 views

  •  
    Un gars qui pense qu'on devrait vendre nos données. Un de plus. J'ai laissé le commentaire suivant: What says that people can't have control on their data? We never actually tried. In the US, UK and France, there are right now nationwide programs which evaluate the possibility of a world where people have control on their data. The idea is not to mount a wall between companies and their customers, but rather to empower people with their data and allow big companies and start-up alike to create new services from people's data. The concept behind this line of thinking is called Vendor Relationship Management (VRM). Not only marketing data is quickly obsolete (as you said, it's constantly flowing), but the data is siloed (which is why Google spends lots of money buying databases) and a lot of guesswork is put into the design of new services. What if people had all their data (health, insurance, banking, telecomunications, ID…) in a personal data store and allowed companies to connect to it, on a one-app-at-a-time basis? Heaps of new ideas could emerge and new players would have the possibility to create apps tailored just for you without having to guess or spend money in shady databases. It raises several questions: what about security? Can people really manage their data? An organisation called La Fing is experimenting the idea in France to get some answers. The project is called MesInfos, And big companies are tagging along (Banking institutions, Telcoms, Insurance companies , and even Google). But what's clear right now, is that the situation - with big companies hoarding our personal data without giving much control back on it - is not a fatality. And there are certainly better answers than "Protect all your data" or "Put a price on it".
clombion

Jawbone launches an ecosystem for Up, lets other apps tap into your fitness data - 0 views

  •  
    Jawbone wants users to do more with their activity data and it plans to collect even more of it in the future. The company is making two moves today to accomplish those goals: it's allowing Up fitness band data to be shared with other activity-tracking apps via a new API, and it has acquired competitor BodyMedia.
marinealbarede

UK to encourage doctors to prescribe health apps - mobihealthnews - 0 views

  •  
    Au Royaume-Uni, le département de la santé est sur le point de demander aux médecins du pays d'encourager leurs patients à se servir d'applications mobiles pour suivre leur santé et d'éventuels symptômes. 15 000 patients en utiliseraient déjà... si la position du gouvernement est en partie motivée par des économies budgétaires, on peut penser que ces applications et services ouvrent la porte à de nouveaux usages ; notamment récupérer des données personnelles, pour en faire ce que l'on souhaite....
marinealbarede

Study: Consumers Will Pay $5 for an App That Respects Their Privacy - Rebecca J. Rosen ... - 1 views

  •  
    Une récente étude de 2 économistes de l'Université du Colorado montre que les gens seraient prêts à payer environ 5$ pour une application qui respecte leur privacy, la préférant à des applications gratuites mais qui collectent de nombreuses données.
marinealbarede

"Green Button" Open Data Just Created an App Market for 27M US Hom - ReadWriteWebes - 2 views

  •  
    L'initiative du "Green Button", permettant aux consommateurs américains de récupérer d'un clic leurs données de consommation énergétique, vient de créer un nouveau marché d'applications et de services, qui viendront très vite permettre à plus de 20M de foyers de faire usage de leurs données de façon intelligente.
1 - 7 of 7
Showing 20 items per page