Vive_Levant, to random French

!

usine en difficulté
chômage partiel
pertes abyssales
grève
Les syndicats : « on se moque du monde, on nous cache des choses ! Nous exigeons de voir les comptes ou bien ça va barder ! »

Société.ninja : tous les comptes détaillés sont au RNE depuis 2016, le pdf est là.

(surtout les juristes du syndicat qui pourraient donner l’info à leurs adhérents)

FredricT,
@FredricT@imaginair.es avatar

@Vive_Levant Ben, les syndiqués sont des gens comme les autres. La réforme de 2017 a réduit le nombre d'élus et d'heures de délégation, et a écarté plein d'anciens en dévalorisant leurs connaissances de l'ancien Code du travail. Donc oui, les représentants du personnel peuvent être incompétents, comme tout le monde.

thisismissem, to random
@thisismissem@hachyderm.io avatar

So let me get this right: Europol wants to not have E2EE because it would prevent them finding CSAM / CSE (among other things), but Europol also doesn't have a CyberTipline API for organisations to report CSAM / CSE to law enforcement?

So you aren't receiving reports of CSAM / CSE efficiently from existing services, but arguing you want to violate everyone's privacy to "find CSAM / CSE"

Did I get that right?

nicfox, to ADHD
@nicfox@fosstodon.org avatar

My 1st study as part of my PhD has been published. It explores the circumstances of seriously harmed missing children and the associated guardianship opportunities and issues.

The paper (open access): https://doi.org/10.1080/10439463.2024.2333561

There’s also a very brief blog post summary here: https://www.n8prp.org.uk/2024/04/05/too-risky-yet-not-risky-enough-new-research-on-seriously-harmed-missing-children/

Deidre, to random French
@Deidre@diaspodon.fr avatar

Coucou les mastonautes !
La journée va pas être simple avec des sujets CSE pas faciles...
Heureusement ce soir c'est le week-end et j'ai des belles choses de prévues !
Belle journée à tous et n'oubliez pas votre ! 😉😚

FredricT,
@FredricT@imaginair.es avatar

@nartagnan @Deidre N'hésitez pas si vous avez des questions 😉

indianewswatch, to india
@indianewswatch@kolektiva.social avatar

The Dubious Business of Trading Carbon and Its Stakes For India’s People and Forests

Tribal communities in the Araku Valley of Andhra Pradesh “signed away” their rights to carbon credits through a local NGO intermediary. Plantations done by the communities on their private land, spread across 6,000 hectares in 333 villages, began generating carbon credits for the French company Livelihood Funds in 2010.

#

https://science.thewire.in/environment/the-dubious-business-of-trading-carbon-and-its-stakes-for-indias-people-and-forests/

br00t4c, to hungary
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar

Crisis in Hungarian politics is exposing Orbán’s vulnerabilities. Will it sway undecided voters?

President’s resignation shines light on gap between government’s behaviour and rhetoric as country prepares for local and European elections

#orban #groomers #hungary #fidesz #childabuse #coverup #cse #school #katalinnovak #familyvalues #juditvarga #fascists #projection

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/feb/13/crisis-in-hungarian-politics-is-exposing-orbans-vulnerabilities-will-it-sway-undecided-voters

itnewsbot, to ArtificialIntelligence
@itnewsbot@schleuss.online avatar

Cops bogged down by flood of fake AI child sex images, report says - Enlarge (credit: SB Arts Media | iStock / Getty Images Plus)

L... - https://arstechnica.com/?p=2000368

jdrouet, to random
@jdrouet@mamot.fr avatar

👋 Bonjour,
est-ce qu'il y a des gens ici qui bossent dans des boîtes où il y a des full remotes ?

billrobinson, to history

5 December 1968: The HYDRA transatlantic radio link for SIGINT (and diplomatic) communications, first established for US–Canadian–UK SIGINT traffic during the Second World War, is deactivated, having been replaced by undersea cable links.

billrobinson,

14 December 2011: CSE and CSIS sign a general framework memorandum of understanding on "ongoing cooperation on information and intelligence collection, information sharing and operational support".

billrobinson,

15 December 1982: A memo on the government's planned CSIS Act lists "electronic surveillance and surreptitious entry" used against foreign intelligence targets in Canada as CSIS "techniques which CSE considers necessary for its purposes".

billrobinson,

16 December 1944: The XU Committee is asked to decide future XU tasks, including those for the section working on the Japanese military: "Should we receive another assignment from Washington, presumably we would work on it, but the alternatives must be considered".

billrobinson,

17 December 1987: External Affairs notes that CSE participation in the ECHELON satellite monitoring program "has been stopped by a legal opinion from Justice which states that such collection activity would be, if not illegal, at least 'imprudent'." (In the end, the program goes ahead.)

billrobinson,

18 December 2001: The Anti-Terrorism Act (Bill C-36) receives Royal Assent, giving CSE a statutory mandate for the first time and enabling the agency to collect private communications incidentally when operating under ministerial authorization.

billrobinson,

19 December 2021: NSIRA Chair Marie Deschamps meets with the Minister of National Defence to discuss NSIRA’s relationship with CSE: "Difficulties in obtaining timely access to information, the inability to independently verify the veracity and completeness of the information provided, and a larger culture of resisting and impeding the efficient progress of review activities directly impact NSIRA’s ability to fulfill the government’s mandate in regards to CSE."

billrobinson,

20 December 2004: CANSLO/W Michael Doucet, CSE's senior liaison officer at NSA, writes that he's "working with CSE HQ to develop a partnership framework which will entrench a corporate culture of always seeking opportunities to make valuable, tangible contributions to NSA."

billrobinson,

21 December 1941: His initial contract with the Examination Unit having expired, Herbert Yardley offers his consulting services to the Canadian Army as "the only white man who is thoroughly conversant with every type of Japanese Battle Communications."

billrobinson,

22 December 1994: CSE Chief Stewart Woolner proposes that efficiencies and resource savings could result if the intercept service, the Canadian Forces Supplementary Radio System, were brought under "closer and more direct CSE management." The CFSRS interprets the proposal as a resource grab.

billrobinson,

23 December 1941: Lester Pearson comments on intercepted Japanese telegrams that show pre-Pearl Harbor plans to repatriate their diplomats. If they had been received and decrypted by the XU earlier, Pearson states, the messages would have been "a clear indication that something was going to happen."

billrobinson,

24 December 1941: The UK asks Canada to intercept Japanese communications with their agents in the Western Hemisphere as a "first priority", promising "any help which the United Kingdom authorities can give in regard to Japanese technique or other matters".

billrobinson,

25 December 1949: "The last TYPEX [cipher machine] message received at CBNRC was deciphered at the Guigues Street location in December 1949, and contained Christmas Greetings from the Director and Staff of GCHQ."

billrobinson,

26 December 1991: The Soviet Union, CSE's primary SIGINT target since the 1950s, is dissolved.

billrobinson,

27 December 1945: Col. Pat Bayley advises External Affairs that Canada should combine its cryptanalytic and code-making activities in a single organization, "since nothing [is] more dangerous than the making of cyphers by persons with no knowledge of the methods employed in breaking them."

billrobinson,

28 December 1995: The New York Times consults the man on the street concerning recent CSE activities: "'I think they're overstepping their authority,' [Bill Seward, 50, the mechanic at Petro-Canada's Hoggs Back Service Center] said".

billrobinson,

29 December 1945: Top officials from External Affairs, National Defence and the National Research Council meet and confirm that Canada should create a peacetime civilian SIGINT agency.

billrobinson,

30 December 1952: Order-in-Council P.C. 4704 authorizes CBNRC to produce cryptographic material to help NATO secure its communications.

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