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Ormai, se entri a far parte del multicolore universo della shit-right è solo perché, di fatto, hai superato un impegnativo test psicoattitudinale.
E no, se l'hai superato non è perché hai risposto correttamente...

#TheConspiracyConsortium: esamina le discussioni sul COVID-19 tra i canali di Telegram di estremisti di destra
Di Ciaran #OConnor

isdglobal.org/isd-publications…

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Chi è questo cybercriminale chiamato #log4j e perché ci odia?
E se usiamo la #blockchain e lo #SPID non potremmo sconfiggerlo?
Se ti fai queste domande, forse è meglio che leggi qui
⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️
cittadinomedio.online/q/il-cit…

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Aziende come #Alphabet, #Amazon, #Facebook e #Microsoft tracciano molto su di noi. Ma come monetizzano tali informazioni su tutte le varie piattaforme di loro proprietà, dalla ricerca all'e-commerce, ai social media e al cloud computing? Questa asimmetria informativa è una delle critiche principali di #BigTech e si ripercuote sull'inadeguatezza dei report su cui i regolatori basano le proprie decisioni (e sanzioni)
Di Rana #Foroohar sul #FinancialTime
t.co/mQqhB87iSD

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Impressionante la mappa segnalata da @emergeheart che riassume l'intricato panorama dell'accanimento verso assange!
mastodon.social/@emergeheart/1…

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Andrea Lattanzi è il vincitore della quinta edizione del premio giornalistico under 35 Letizia Leviti, la cui cerimonia si è svolta a Palazzo Vecchio alla presenza del sindaco di Firenze Dario Nardella. Lattanzi ha ottenuto il riconoscimento per l’articolo pubblicato su La Stampa dal titolo "Una vita senza Big tech, storie di chi cerca alternative ai giganti del web: non barattiamo i nostri dati per i loro servizi". Nella motivazione si legge che il lavoro di Lattanzi "è un lavoro ‘politico’, nel senso più alto del termine. Un lavoro di visione, di concetto, che ci dimostra come, anche in questi anni che viviamo, ci si possa ’slegare’ dai vincoli della tecnologia.

lanazione.it/firenze/cronaca/a…

in reply to Poliverso - notizie dal Fediverso ⁂

Ricordiamo che il video in questione costituisce ancora, a quasi un anno di distanza, l'unico servizio giornalistico video sul fediverso e sulle risorse alternative alle piattaforme centralizzate.
Nel video, vi sono gli interessanti interventi di @quinta @:fedora: filippo db :gnu: e Andrea "Ska" de @Le Alternative

@Notizie da Poliverso

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Riconoscimento facciale: la CNIL, il #GarantePrivacy francese, comunica a #CLEARVIEW AI di cessare il riutilizzo delle fotografie accessibili su Internet
cnil.fr/fr/reconnaissance-faci…

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La Commissione geospaziale del Regno Unito ha pubblicato un rapporto sui risultati di una consultazione pubblica sull’etica dei dati di localizzazione.

gov.uk/government/news/public-…

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Ai #rider e alle rider del FoodDelivery!
Attraverso il questionario predisposto da #IRPIMedia, vogliamo chiedervi informazioni circa l'utilizzo da parte delle piattaforme digitali di tecnologia e algoritmi per organizzare e controllare il vostro lavoro.
#TrackingExposed
cc @twcitalia @SmartWorkersUnion framaforms.org/lifes-a-game-fo…

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"la realtà è che ci troviamo dinanzi ad un attacco molto preoccupante che necessita massima attenzione da parte delle istituzioni onde evitare catastrofiche ripercussioni nei prossimi mesi"
Pierluigi #Paganini su #ItalianTech a proposito dello strano silenzio sul caso #Sogin
italian.tech/blog/sicuri-nella…

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Dal 13/12, cambiano le regole per le notizie su #Facebook, per l’applicazione italiana delle norme della direttiva #copyright, e questo conferma che la discussione sulla direttiva copyright non è mai stata (o quanto meno non doveva essere) solo una discussione tra aziende o addetti ai lavori, ma un problema che impatta direttamente sui cittadini.
Di Bruno #Saetta su #ValigiaBlù
valigiablu.it/facebook-copyrig…

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Questa mattina è stato pubblicato il "Mapping report on national remedies against online piracy of sports content" (Come combatte l'Europa la pirateria di eventi sportivi online?) dell'Osservatorio europeo dell'audiovisivo del Consiglio d'Europa.
Tra gli autori Giovanni Maria #Riccio e Fabiola #IraciGambazza.
rm.coe.int/mapping-report-on-n…

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Questo sondaggio #ISPI è interessantissimo perché non indaga soltanto la percezione del pubblico italiano sugli aspetti che determinano la società, ma lo mette a confronto con la percezione negli anni passati.
Emerge una impressionante variabilità della percezione in base alla copertura mediatica piuttosto che agli scenari reali.
ispionline.it/it/pubblicazione…
#ISPI

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Job Offer: Junior Policy Assistant in Brussels


Member of the European Parliament Patrick Breyer (Pirate Party) is looking for an English speaking assistant to be employed in Brussels. Patrick works in the LIBE and JURI committees with a focus on privacy and Internet freedom.

As Junior Policy Assistant you will be called upon to perform a multitude of tasks including:

  • supporting me in my parliamentary work (preparation, expertise, analysis, summaries, advice, drafting) including political communications and outreach;
  • keeping up to date on the political and academic debate within the field as well as related news and case-law;
  • contact with relevant stakeholders (NGOs, industry, academia), liaising with other political groups’ offices, in-house communication, the management, organisation and follow-up of meetings, research, information, administrative and communication tasks.


The job requires great flexibility and adaptability: irregular working hours, varying workloads, ability to work under pressure and on tight deadlines, and the capacity for teamwork in an international environment, with diplomacy skills.

I expect:

  • degree in the relevant field; legal expertise is of advantage;
  • policy work experience in a political/government organisation/NGO related to privacy or tech-nology
  • a general understanding of the European Union and the European Parliament,;
  • fluency in English; fluency in German or French is of advantage;
  • a keen interest in privacy and technology;
  • an understanding of the core values of the Pirate movement;
  • personal integrity and professional approach to the work;
  • willingness to work with Open Source Software and other open technologies;
  • enthusiasm for work in an international team;
  • full support for transparency in public affairs as well as deep respect for privacy in personal matters.


I offer:

  • full time position as an Accredited Parliamentary Assistant (APA) in Brussels;
  • salary in accordance with Parliamentary regulation;
  • possibility to support a meaningful and transparent policy.


How to apply:
Please send a structured CV and a cover letter containing a vision of the position by 15/01/2022 to jobs@patrick-breyer.de (PGP key optionally available here), using the subject line “Application Junior Policy Advisor [YOUR NAME]”.

Preferred starting date: February 2022.


patrick-breyer.de/en/job-offer…

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Congratulazioni a @paolo e a Emiliano #Vavassori per la recente nomina nel board in @libreoffice

#TheDocumentFoundation!
#LibreOffice #opensource
blog.documentfoundation.org/bl…

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«Nel tentativo di mappare la tela della giustizia digitale nel 2021, abbiamo contattato 21 esperti di tutto il mondo per le loro prospettive sui principali sviluppi contro Big Tech quest'anno, nonché su ciò che vedono come opportunità di azione progressiva e cause per preoccupazione per l'anno a venire. In questa serie di brevi interviste, ci offrono diverse traiettorie di resistenza, opportunità e sfida nella marcia costante contro la cattura della Big Tech.»

botpopuli.net/21-takes-on-big-…

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#log4j: una serena analisi:
«per molti managerz, il software #opensource e' fatto da fessi che lavorano gratis, e siccome lavorano lavorano per te, e siccome lavorano per te li puoi anche trattare come merde»
Di @loweel
keinpfusch.net/log4j-log4j/

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I leader delle istituzioni dell'UE hanno firmato una dichiarazione congiunta che identifica le #priorità legislative fondamentali per il 2022 e hanno accolto con favore i progressi sulle priorità del 2021
#KeyLegislativePriorities
europarl.europa.eu/news/it/pre…

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⚠️⚠️⚠️⚠️⚠️
Non sappiamo se si tratti di una violazione confermata, ma segnaliamo ugualmente il tweet di #sonoclaudio.
Sarebbe decisamente molto molto grave...
#Tiscali #databreach
twitter.com/sonoclaudio/status…

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Transparency lawsuit against secret EU surveillance research: MEP Patrick Breyer achieves partial success in court


The European Court of Justice today published a landmark ruling of major significance for EU-funded “security research” (Case T-158/19).[1] Under the “iBorderCtrl” project, the EU tested alleged “video lie detector” technology to be used on travellers. On 15 March 2019, MEP and civil liberties activist Patrick Breyer (Pirate Party) filed a lawsuit for the release of classified documents on the ethical justifiability, legal admissibility and results of the technology.

According to the court ruling, the EU research agency may no longer keep these documents completely secret. For example, the ethical and legal evaluation of technologies for “automated deception detection” or automated “risk assessment” must be published, as long as they do not relate specifically to the iBorderCtrl project. In order to protect commercial interests, on the other hand, the examination of the ethical risks (e.g. risk of stigmatisation and false positives) and the legal admissibility of the concrete iBorderCtrl technology as well as reports on the results of the project may be kept secret. The public interest in transparency would be satisfied by the obligation on project participants to make a scientific publication about the project within four years.

“The European Union keeps funding the development and testing of technology that violates fundamental rights and is unethical,” said plaintiff Breyer. “The landmark ruling is an important partial success that will generally boost the public discussion about dangerous technology for mass surveillance, mass control and personal profiling. ‚Trade secrets’ will no longer be a killer argument for refusing public access.”

“What is not acceptable, however, is that the specific EU surveillance projects should remain secret for years and that an overriding public interest in their transparency has not been recognised. Taxpayers, science, media and parliaments must have access to publicly funded research – especially in the case of pseudo-scientific and Orwellian developments such as a ‘video lie detector’. There is an urgent need for legal reform when it comes to intrusive EU research and development!”


Press briefing: Transparency complaint against secret EU surveillance research “iBorderCtrl”


The EU is funding the development of a supposed “video lie detector” that would be used on travellers before entering the EU. Member of the European Parliament and civil liberties activist Patrick Breyer (Pirate Party) filed a lawsuit on 15 March 2019 for the release of classified documents on the ethical justifiability and legality of the technology.

The European Court of Justice will deliver its judgment in public in Luxembourg on 15 December 2021 at 11 am (Case T-158/19). A landmark ruling could shed light on EU-funded “security research” in general.

How is the “video lie detector” supposed to work?


The iBorderCtrl research project, funded by the EU with 4.5 million euros, aimed at developing a prototype. The idea was that people who want to travel to the EU should take a lie detector test at home in front of their webcam. Based on their facial expressions and behaviour when answering standard questions, special software would determine whether the person is telling the truth.

Whether such “deception detection” technology works is highly controversial. The only “scientific” assessments of the technology have been published by Manchester Metropolitan University (MMU), which was part of the iBorderCtrl consortium. The MMU scientists have patented the technology and are selling it commercially through a company called Silent Talker Ltd. As the technology is based on machine learning, the developers themselves say they do not know what the system assumes are signs of deception.

The EU Commission claimed in 2019: “The project proposal has been scientifically assessed by independent experts and has undergone a technical review confirming the scientific assumptions, including the statistical significance of the automatic deception detection system, based on the scientific and technological research carried out to date.” However, the EU refuses to release the “scientific evaluation”. In court, the EU research agency explained that it is not a precondition for EU funding that the methods of a project are are recognized in science.

Independent scientists fundamentally question whether the truth of a statement can be inferred from “micro-expressions”.

What are the reasons given for refusing public access to the documents?


Breyer’s request to access the ethics report, as well as to a legal assessment, to much of the project’s public relations strategy and the project’s results claiming that these documents are “commercial information” of the companies involved and of “commercial value”. The EU research agency’s lawyer explained in court: “Democratic control of research funding is not necessary”, arguing that research and development was not yet about the use of the technology. The EU research funding deliberately does not follow an open access approach in order to protect competitive advantages of the participating companies. Disclosure of the iBorderCtrl project would jeopardise the business interests and reputation of the participating companies and institutions. Public comments taken out of context could put the responsible entities under pressure and jeopardise the completion and marketing of the technology.

Breyer said: “The reasons given for the secrecy demonstrate: It is all about economical profit. Regarding this highly dangerous technology the transparency interests of the scientific community and the public must take precedence over private profit interests.”

What does Breyer criticise about the technology?


Because of the technology’s lack of reliability, countless people are at risk of being falsely accused of lying and exposed to disadvantages. Certain groups of people (for example persons of colour, women, older people, children, persons with disabilities) might be particularly likely to be falsely accused. After two parliamentary questions by Breyer (1, 2), the EU Commissioner for Home Affairs had to admit that the project did not evaluate which proportion of respondents were classified potential “liars” by the technology, what its error rate is and whether the error rate is higher for certain groups of people.

What is Breyer criticising about the technology?


Because of the lack of reliability of the technology, countless people are at risk of being falsely accused of lying and exposed to disadvantages. Experience shows that certain groups of people (for example, people with dark skin, women, older people, children, people with disabilities) may be particularly likely to be misjudged. After two parliamentary questions by Breyer (1, 2), the EU Commissioner for Home Affairs had to admit that the project did not check what proportion of respondents the technology classifies as “liars”, what their error rate is and whether the error rate is higher for certain groups of people.

Breyer: “Systems for recognising conspicuous behaviour gradually create a uniform society of passive people who just don’t want to attract attention. Such a dead surveillance society is not worth living in. I am convinced that this pseudo-scientific security hocus-pocus will not detect any terrorists. For stressed, nervous or tired people, such a suspicion-generator can easily become a nightmare. In Germany lie detectors are not admissible as evidence in court precisely because they do not work. We need to put an end to the EU-funded development of technologies for monitoring and controlling law-abiding citizens ever more closely!”

The EU Commission defends the project by referring to an independent external ethics evaluation, but refuses to release it.

EU research funds are being diverted for lobbying purposes


In April 2021, it emerged that the „iBorderCtrl“ project, which was entirely funded by the EU, used part of its funding to lobby legislators for fundamental rights restrictions which would allow the use of its controversial technology on travellers. The EU Commission tried to hide this in a partially redacted document that was reconstructed by technical means.

While the Commission publicly claimed that “iBorderCtrl was a research project and did not envisage the piloting or deployment of an actually working system”, the secret parts of the redacted “communications plan” revealed that the iBorderCtrl consortium collaborated with industry “so that [iBorderCtrl] can easily be the basis for many other applications for other target groups and even other application domains”.

The document goes on to acknowledge that “a statutory legal basis will be required” to use the “deception detection” and other technologies at borders. “To foster such legal reforms” the consortium envisaged “dissemination activities to … stakeholders” such as Members of Parliament, the Commission and border authorities.

In her answer to a written question by Patrick Breyer, the EU Commissionerfor Home Affairs, Ylva Johansson, denied the verifiable lobbying.

EU has a history of funding illegal and unethical technology


Years ago, FRONTEX had technology for video lie detection tested. Under a follow-up project to iBorderCtrl, “TRESSPASS”, the EU again funded the testing of unscientific technology to “assess the sincerity of the traveller and his statements”. In October, the European Parliament expressed “concern” about the iBorderCtrl project.

The EU keeps funding illegal and unethical surveillance research. With projects like INDECT or CleanIT, EU security research has been criticised for years. The actual extent is difficult to grasp. We have had a long list of potentially relevant research projects compiled, but evaluating them would require extensive analyses.

In order to stop the funding of technology that violates fundamental rights, fundamental changes would be necessary:

  • Advisory bodies should include an equal number of representatives of all political groups, criminologists, victims’ associations and non-governmental organisations for the protection of civil liberties and privacy, in addition to representatives of national governments and industry.
  • A decision on the tendering of a project should be made only after an investigation by the European Fundamental Rights Agency on the impact of the respective research objective on our fundamental rights (impact assessment).
  • The development of technologies for increased surveillance and control of citizens should be excluded by law.
  • Instead, security research should be extended to all crime and accident prevention options, and should include independent research into the effectiveness, costs, harmful side effects and alternatives to each proposal.
  • Because perceived security is an important prerequisite for our well-being, research on how to increase public awareness of security and how to counteract distorted assessments and portrayals of the security situation should be funded as well.


These unresolved issues are exacerbated by the new EU Defence Fund, through which the EU is expanding its flow of money to the development of weapons, i.e. lethal technology.

What is the aim of the lawsuit?


Plaintiff Patrick Breyer: “The European Union is funding illegal technology that violates fundamental rights and is unethical. It labels the research a ‘trade secret’ of the corporations involved. With my transparency lawsuit, I want the court to rule once and for all that taxpayers, scientists, media and Members of Parliament have a right to information on publicly funded research – especially in the case of pseudoscientific and Orwellian technology such as the ‘iBorderCtrl video lie detector’.”

Breyer has already successfully taken the EU Commission to the European Court of Justice in the past. At the time, the Commission refused to hand over documents on indiscriminate data retention.

Relevant documents:


Official Summary of the proceedings (meeting report) (in German)

Pleading of the plaintiff’s lawyer in court (in German)

Answer given by the EU Commissioner for Home Affairs on 30/03/2020

“Open Security Data”: Search engine on EU security research

EPRS Opinion: Mechanisms to prevent unethical research and funding – Horizon and EDF

Press releases:

patrick-breyer.de/en/transpare…

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Il settore #spyware è un far West milionario legittimato dalla lotta alla criminalità e al terrorismo.
Leggete assolutamente Rosita #Rijtano che su #Lavialibera intervista Claudio #Nex Guarnieri (che ha aiutato #Amnesty e i media partner sul caso #NSO #Pegasus)
lavialibera.it/it-schede-745-h…

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#log4j vs #NATO: #USA, #UK e #Turchia i paesi più esposti!
Quasi un mln di attacchi in 3 giorni: gli aggressori stanno testando molte varianti di exploit, ma non tutti gli attacchi sono malevoli (p es aziende di #cybersecurity che effettuano penetration test).
Vi@ #WeLiveSecurity
welivesecurity.com/2021/12/13/…

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Press briefing: Transparency complaint against secret EU surveillance research “iBorderCtrl”


The EU is funding the development of a supposed “video lie detector” that would be used on travellers before entering the EU. Member of the European Parliament and civil liberties activist Patrick Breyer (Pirate Party) filed a lawsuit on 15 March 2019 for the release of classified documents on the ethical justifiability and legality of the technology.

The European Court of Justice will deliver its judgment in public in Luxembourg on 15 December 2021 at 11 am (Case T-158/19). A landmark ruling could shed light on EU-funded “security research” in general.

How is the “video lie detector” supposed to work?


The iBorderCtrl research project, funded by the EU with 4.5 million euros, aimed at developing a prototype. The idea was that people who want to travel to the EU should take a lie detector test at home in front of their webcam. Based on their facial expressions and behaviour when answering standard questions, special software would determine whether the person is telling the truth.

Whether such “deception detection” technology works is highly controversial. The only “scientific” assessments of the technology have been published by Manchester Metropolitan University (MMU), which was part of the iBorderCtrl consortium. The MMU scientists have patented the technology and are selling it commercially through a company called Silent Talker Ltd. As the technology is based on machine learning, the developers themselves say they do not know what the system assumes are signs of deception.

The EU Commission claimed in 2019: “The project proposal has been scientifically assessed by independent experts and has undergone a technical review confirming the scientific assumptions, including the statistical significance of the automatic deception detection system, based on the scientific and technological research carried out to date.” However, the EU refuses to release the “scientific evaluation”. In court, the EU research agency explained that it is not a precondition for EU funding that the methods of a project are are recognized in science.

Independent scientists fundamentally question whether the truth of a statement can be inferred from “micro-expressions”.

What are the reasons given for refusing public access to the documents?


Breyer’s request to access the ethics report, as well as to a legal assessment, to much of the project’s public relations strategy and the project’s results claiming that these documents are “commercial information” of the companies involved and of “commercial value”. The EU research agency’s lawyer explained in court: “Democratic control of research funding is not necessary”, arguing that research and development was not yet about the use of the technology. The EU research funding deliberately does not follow an open access approach in order to protect competitive advantages of the participating companies. Disclosure of the iBorderCtrl project would jeopardise the business interests and reputation of the participating companies and institutions. Public comments taken out of context could put the responsible entities under pressure and jeopardise the completion and marketing of the technology.

Breyer said: “The reasons given for the secrecy demonstrate: It is all about economical profit. Regarding this highly dangerous technology the transparency interests of the scientific community and the public must take precedence over private profit interests.”

What does Breyer criticise about the technology?


Because of the technology’s lack of reliability, countless people are at risk of being falsely accused of lying and exposed to disadvantages. Certain groups of people (for example persons of colour, women, older people, children, persons with disabilities) might be particularly likely to be falsely accused. After two parliamentary questions by Breyer (1, 2), the EU Commissioner for Home Affairs had to admit that the project did not evaluate which proportion of respondents were classified potential “liars” by the technology, what its error rate is and whether the error rate is higher for certain groups of people.

What is Breyer criticising about the technology?


Because of the lack of reliability of the technology, countless people are at risk of being falsely accused of lying and exposed to disadvantages. Experience shows that certain groups of people (for example, people with dark skin, women, older people, children, people with disabilities) may be particularly likely to be misjudged. After two parliamentary questions by Breyer (1, 2), the EU Commissioner for Home Affairs had to admit that the project did not check what proportion of respondents the technology classifies as “liars”, what their error rate is and whether the error rate is higher for certain groups of people.

Breyer: “Systems for recognising conspicuous behaviour gradually create a uniform society of passive people who just don’t want to attract attention. Such a dead surveillance society is not worth living in. I am convinced that this pseudo-scientific security hocus-pocus will not detect any terrorists. For stressed, nervous or tired people, such a suspicion-generator can easily become a nightmare. In Germany lie detectors are not admissible as evidence in court precisely because they do not work. We need to put an end to the EU-funded development of technologies for monitoring and controlling law-abiding citizens ever more closely!”

The EU Commission defends the project by referring to an independent external ethics evaluation, but refuses to release it.

EU research funds are being diverted for lobbying purposes


In April 2021, it emerged that the „iBorderCtrl“ project, which was entirely funded by the EU, used part of its funding to lobby legislators for fundamental rights restrictions which would allow the use of its controversial technology on travellers. The EU Commission tried to hide this in a partially redacted document that was reconstructed by technical means.

While the Commission publicly claimed that “iBorderCtrl was a research project and did not envisage the piloting or deployment of an actually working system”, the secret parts of the redacted “communications plan” revealed that the iBorderCtrl consortium collaborated with industry “so that [iBorderCtrl] can easily be the basis for many other applications for other target groups and even other application domains”.

The document goes on to acknowledge that “a statutory legal basis will be required” to use the “deception detection” and other technologies at borders. “To foster such legal reforms” the consortium envisaged “dissemination activities to … stakeholders” such as Members of Parliament, the Commission and border authorities.

In her answer to a written question by Patrick Breyer, the EU Commissionerfor Home Affairs, Ylva Johansson, denied the verifiable lobbying.

EU has a history of funding illegal and unethical technology


Years ago, FRONTEX had technology for video lie detection tested. Under a follow-up project to iBorderCtrl, “TRESSPASS”, the EU again funded the testing of unscientific technology to “assess the sincerity of the traveller and his statements”. In October, the European Parliament expressed “concern” about the iBorderCtrl project.

The EU keeps funding illegal and unethical surveillance research. With projects like INDECT or CleanIT, EU security research has been criticised for years. The actual extent is difficult to grasp. We have had a long list of potentially relevant research projects compiled, but evaluating them would require extensive analyses.

In order to stop the funding of technology that violates fundamental rights, fundamental changes would be necessary:

  • Advisory bodies should include an equal number of representatives of all political groups, criminologists, victims’ associations and non-governmental organisations for the protection of civil liberties and privacy, in addition to representatives of national governments and industry.
  • A decision on the tendering of a project should be made only after an investigation by the European Fundamental Rights Agency on the impact of the respective research objective on our fundamental rights (impact assessment).
  • The development of technologies for increased surveillance and control of citizens should be excluded by law.
  • Instead, security research should be extended to all crime and accident prevention options, and should include independent research into the effectiveness, costs, harmful side effects and alternatives to each proposal.
  • Because perceived security is an important prerequisite for our well-being, research on how to increase public awareness of security and how to counteract distorted assessments and portrayals of the security situation should be funded as well.


These unresolved issues are exacerbated by the new EU Defence Fund, through which the EU is expanding its flow of money to the development of weapons, i.e. lethal technology.

What is the aim of the lawsuit?


Plaintiff Patrick Breyer: “The European Union is funding illegal technology that violates fundamental rights and is unethical. It labels the research a ‘trade secret’ of the corporations involved. With my transparency lawsuit, I want the court to rule once and for all that taxpayers, scientists, media and Members of Parliament have a right to information on publicly funded research – especially in the case of pseudoscientific and Orwellian technology such as the ‘iBorderCtrl video lie detector’.”

Breyer has already successfully taken the EU Commission to the European Court of Justice in the past. At the time, the Commission refused to hand over documents on indiscriminate data retention.

Relevant documents:


Official Summary of the proceedings (meeting report) (in German)

Pleading of the plaintiff’s lawyer in court (in German)

Answer given by the EU Commissioner for Home Affairs on 30/03/2020

“Open Security Data”: Search engine on EU security research

EPRS Opinion: Mechanisms to prevent unethical research and funding – Horizon and EDF

Press releases:


patrick-breyer.de/en/press-bri…

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nature has actually contacted me for comment about accusations that Sci-Hub is a threat, here is my full response / it is clear that academic publishers care about their money, not about security of other people

bird.trom.tf/ringo_ring/status…

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Oggi, il #GarantePrivacy norvegese ha multato #Grindr per 65mln di NOK (=€.6,34 mln ).
L'app di incontri LGBTQI non ha ricevuto un consenso valido dagli utenti, ma ha comunque condiviso dati personali sensibili. noyb.eu/en/ncc-noyb-gdpr-compl…

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Unknown parent

mastodon - Collegamento all'originale

informapirata ⁂

Esempio: Ricorda sempre che quando usi un linguaggio poco Urbano, dovresti sempre aggiungere l'indicatore di content warning

eh già

PS: Ricorda sempre che quando usi un linguaggio poco Urbano, dovresti sempre aggiungere l'indicatore CW di content warning, come da esempio qui presente 😅

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UE: oggi 15/12 si voterà in plenaria per il #DigitalMarketsAct, che include il concetto di "neutralità dei dispositivi". In sintesi, le persone potranno disinstallare le app preinstallate e scaricare e installare app da terze parti, mentre i fornitori dovranno dare accesso alle funzionalità dei loro dispositivi e fornirne dati sulla portabiità (ovvero quanto è facile/difficile passare da un loro prodotto a un altro)
(Grazie a @eticadigitale per la segnalazione)
fsfe.org/news/2021/news-202112…

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Digital Services Act: No game-changer for the protection of citizens’ rights online


Today, the European Parliament’s Internal Market and Consumer Protection Committee (IMCO) adopted its report on the EU’s planned Digital Services Act. Last night, three amendments by the Civil Liberties Committee on data protection, consumer protection and legal redress were rejected and a identification requirement for publications on porn platforms was added.

MEP Patrick Breyer (Pirate Party), who has been following the negotiations as rapporteur of the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs (LIBE), comments on the outcome:

“From a civil liberties and digital rights perspective, the outcome of the negotiations is largely disappointing. The European Parliament made groundbreaking demands last year, but it seems now that it was mostly bark and no bite. Anyone who had hoped for an end to the surveillance capitalist business model on the internet, an end to the monopoly position of a few internet corporations or the error-prone upload filter censorship machines will be disappointed. More transparency is simply not enough. Only few of the LIBE Committee‘s recommendations have been taken up.[1] This cannot be the last word. For the plenary vote in January, my committee will most likely present a whole series of amendments to protect privacy and freedom of expression.”

Pirate Party MEP Mikuláš Peksa worked on the DSA as rapporteur in the Committee on Economic on Monetary Affairs (ECON). The Czech Chairperson of the European Pirates sees a missed opportunity for constraining the power of autocratic governments, who will still be able to order the deletion of content abroad or request user information without court order:

„The central idea of the whole DSA is to modernize European access to digital services and make them more transparent, accessible, and free“, Peksa says. „Our main goal is to protect the interests of individual users and smaller players by clearly defining their rights. From our point of view, letting the authorities in each member state decide about banning ,,illegal” content is a colossal mistake which will fragmentise the market and allow authoritarians like Orbán to control the online space and oppress the opposition.“

The Pirates also see a new threat to digital privacy and security in yesterday’s decision to make publications of pictures and text on adult entertainment portals dependent on providing the operator with the uploader‘s personal mobile phone number. “Because of the foreseeable hacking and leaks of these porn uploader databases, this identification requirement virtually invites stalking and threats against sex workers, LGBTQI persons, and politically exposed and vulnerable persons. Victims of nonconsensual intimate recordings are harmed by the displacement of such material to non-EU portals, which simply ignore notifications of illegal material and requests from law enforcement. Accepting the elimination of anonymous publishing as a deterrent against objectionable content threatens to set a precedent far beyond adult entertainment.”

In detail, Breyer assesses the Digital Services Act compromises with respect to civil liberties as follows:

Upload filters

Parliament has learned from the protests against article 13/17 of the Copyright in the Digital Single Market directive, and rules out new filtering obligations in the Digital Services Act. However, the promise to ban the “voluntary” use of error-prone filters by internet platforms is not kept. In practice, therefore, nothing will change.

Data security

The promised right to anonymous internet use to put an end to the constant data leaks and misuse of data on the net is not part of the IMCO report. Government authorities would be able to request pervasive records on a person‘t online activities without a court order. At least the right to secure encryption is to be guaranteed. And service operators could not be obliged to generally and indiscriminately retain personal user data.

Surveillance advertising

The systematic monitoring and creation of personality profiles of internet users for advertising purposes is not to be banned. However, for the first time, users could generally opt out in the browser (“do not track”) and then also to be spared from annoying consent banners – an important step forward!

Freedom of information

Authorities could require the (cross-border) removal of internet publications without a court order – even if they are completely legal in the country of publication. This means that in future Orban can have content deleted throughout the EU, on the basis of his own laws. The promised ban on network-level blocking is also not part of the report. Internet platforms will not need to ask users before removing their content. At least, according to the Parliament, automatic suspension of users who have allegedly repeatedly violated copyright or other laws will not be mandated.

Interoperability

Digital corporations will continue to be allowed to decide on their own what appears in the timelines of users and what does not. Users are not given a right to opt out of the commercial recommender algorithms or use external algorithms of their own choice.

(Non-)implementation of the recommendations of the LIBE Committee (green: implemented, red: not implemented)

Adopted text (compromise amendments 1-9)


patrick-breyer.de/en/digital-s…

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La Cina ha già vinto.
In quegli stessi USA in cui i lavoratori #Amazon devono decidere tra rischio di morte o licenziamento certo, le associazioni degli imprenditori cercano di fermare ogni legge che impedisca di licenziare i lavoratori che si rifiutano di lavorare in condizioni pericolose per la propria incolumità, perché "Interferisce con la gestione del personale".
Di David #Sirota , Julia #Rock e Andrew #Perez sul #DailyPoster
dailyposter.com/worker-protect…

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#medioevoinformatico: mettere in una mattina di down la foto del cuggino che apre il tower per vedere che cosa s'è bruciato dentro, senza valutare il panico che puoi scatenare con l'immagine plausibile dei server delle poste affidati a volenterosi ma sprovveduti cuggini costretti a rincorrere incandescenti server caserecci. Questi sono i conti per imprese e associazioni culturali che vogliono avere un numero di conto corrente postale, quindi in teoria servizi high-availability. Annamo bbene.

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E quando finalmente riesci a fare un login con firma digitale dopo dieci ore di downtime... scopri che hai sbucciato solo il primo strato della cipolla, e di roba per piangere ce n'è ancora tanta. A cominciare da quel broken link all'immagine che genera desolazione, tristezza, senso di sciatteria, sensazione di abbandono.
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"L’anonimato offre ampie opportunità per la costruzione di un’identità personale in quanto manca la gerarchia di status, mentre l’extraistituzionalità degli stessi, il non sviluppo e l’incertezza delle norme sociali, possono condurre ad un’emarginazione e ridicolizzazione dei processi di comunicazione, che si concentrano settariamente in un complesso ristretto di internauti che man mano perdono il contatto con la realtà terrena."
Di G.Elia #Valori su #IlDenaro
ildenaro.it/aspetti-etici-rela…

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La Commissione Europea metterà a disposizione il codice sorgente dei propri software in un unico archivio per agevolarne l'accesso e il riutilizzo. Prima del rilascio in modalità #opensource, ciascun software sarà sottoposto a controlli per escludere rischi legati alla sicurezza o alla riservatezza, problemi di protezione dei dati o violazioni dei diritti di proprietà intellettuale di terzi.
(grazie a @mte90 per la segnalazione)
ec.europa.eu/commission/pressc…

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Il servizio di #SkyTG24 con Helga Cossu che intervista Guido #Scorza, Matteo #Navacci e Alessandro #Longo su #IntelligenzaArtificiale e il quadro #Privacy e #sorveglianza alla luce del DL #Capienze

video.sky.it/news/cronaca/vide…

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Jens #Zimmermann, il guru dei socialdemocratici tedeschi, dichiara la propria opposizione all'indebolimento della crittografia, che viene tentato con la scusa della lotta contro gli abusi sui minori.
Di Oliver #Noyan su #Euractiv
euractiv.com/section/data-prot…

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Ieri è entrata in vigore un’importante modifica della legge sul diritto d’autore: il decreto legislativo n. 177 del 2021 di attuazione della direttiva dell’Unione Europea n. 790 del 2019, meglio conosciuta come “direttiva #copyright”.
Di Roberto #Caso
robertocaso.it/2021/12/10/demo…

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Che disastro!
Il #DataBreach #Sogin colpisce una delle aziende più strategiche del sistema italiano.
Fortuna che non siamo nel Giappone Imperiale, altrimenti vedremmo i dirigenti IT e acquisti dell'ente fare harakiri di gruppo ai bordi della Braccianese...
twitter.com/marcogovoni/status…

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Julian #Assange ha avuto un ictus nella prigione di Belmarsh: la compagna #StellaMoris accusa lo stress estremo causato dall'accanimento degli USA per ottenere l'estradizione
Di Sarah #Oliver il #DailyMail
dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1…

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Concorrenza sleale...

"All'inizio sembrava un simbolo di libertà ma poi si è trasformato in una delle principali minacce per la democrazia" sostiene Erdogan. E no, non stava parlando di sé stesso, ma del sistema dei social network... 🙄
msn.com/en-gb/news/world/turke…

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“No all’estradizione di #Assange”.
Domani 12 dicembre alle ore 11.00, si terrà il presidio di #Rifondazione Comunista a Roma in Piazza della Rotonda (Pantheon)
articolo21.org/2021/12/no-alle…

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Il #DataBreach di #RDS Radio Dimensione Suono risale a marzo e costituisce un campione interessantissimo per analizzare la consapevolezza di un pubblico generalista nei confronti dei problemi di sicurezza informatica.
La bellissima analisi dei dati di Dario #Fadda su #InsicurezzaDigitale:
insicurezzadigitale.com/perche…

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