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Google Health

“Google has been accused of breaking promises to patients, after the company announced it would be moving a healthcare-focused subsidiary, DeepMind Health, into the main arm of the organisation.The restructure, critics argue, breaks a pledge DeepMind made when it started working with the NHS that “data will never be connected to Google accounts or services”. The change has also resulted in the dismantling of an independent review board, created to oversee the company’s work with the healthcare sector, with Google arguing that the board was too focused on Britain to provide effective oversight for a newly global body.”

Source : Google ‘betrays patient trust’ with DeepMind Health move | Technology | The Guardian

Huawei - 5G

“The move follows Australia’s decision to ban Huawei from supplying 5G equipment over concerns it could facilitate Chinese spying, and its barring from some U.S. government contracts on national security grounds. Germany, which lacks a telecoms hardware industry of its own, is keener to maintain its traditionally close trade and investment ties with Beijing without compromising on its own cyber-security, say officials.”

Source : Exclusive: China’s Huawei opens up to German scrutiny ahead of 5G auctions | Reuters

Cyberstructure L'Internet : un espace politique

“Une grande partie des activités humaines se déroule aujourd’hui sur l’Internet. On y fait des affaires, de la politique, on y bavarde, on travaille, on s’y distrait, on drague… L’Internet n’est donc pas un outil qu’on utilise, c’est un espace où se déroulent nos activités.” – Stéphane Bortzmeyer @bortzmeyer

Source : C & F Éditions

“Today, Privacy International has filed complaints against seven data brokers (Acxiom, Oracle), ad-tech companies (Criteo, Quantcast, Tapad), and credit referencing agencies (Equifax, Experian) with data protection authorities in France, Ireland, and the UK. Privacy International urges the data protection authorities to investigate these companies and to protect individuals from the mass exploitation of their data. Our complaints target companies that, despite exploiting the data of millions of people, are not household names and therefore rarely have their practices challenged. In tandem with the complaints, we have today launched a campaign to seek to empower people and make it easier to demand that these companies delete our data.”

Source : Privacy International files complaints against seven companies for wide-scale and systematic infringements of data protection law | Privacy International

Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin

“After the streaming-video giant released the second season of the comedy “Grace and Frankie” in 2016, its product team put up an image to promote the show to U.S. subscribers that only included Ms. Fonda’s co-star, Lily Tomlin. Tests showed that more users clicked on the show when the photo didn’t include Ms. Fonda. The decision set off a high-pitched internal debate. The Los Angeles-based content team was concerned that Netflix risked alienating Ms. Fonda, and that the move could even violate her contract, while the tech group in the Los Gatos, Calif., headquarters argued the company shouldn’t ignore the data, according to people familiar with the discussions.
In the end, Netflix chose to put images that included Ms. Fonda back in the mix.”

Source : At Netflix, Who Wins When It’s Hollywood vs. the Algorithm? – WSJ

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