Operativo invernal intenta proteger a la población callejera en la capital

Operativo invernal brindó atención y refugio a población callejera vulnerable.


Por Fausto Hernández | Reportero                                                       

El gobierno capitalino anunció un operativo integral ante el inicio de la temporada invernal. La estrategia tuvo como objetivo proteger a la población en situación de calle ante el descenso de temperaturas. Las acciones contemplaron atención directa, entrega de cobijas y alimentos calientes.

Desde el 15 de noviembre se desplegaron brigadas del Instituto de Atención a Poblaciones Prioritarias (IAPP). Los recorridos se realizaron en puntos estratégicos de la ciudad. El personal acercó abrigo, alimentación e información a personas en el espacio público.

Las brigadas canalizaron a la población a los Centros de Cuidados de la Secretaría de Bienestar e Igualdad Social (SEBIEN). También se ofrecieron jornadas de vacunación coordinadas con la Secretaría de Salud de la Ciudad de México. El operativo incluyó alternativas seguras de alojamiento temporal.

Estrategia interinstitucional

Las acciones se basaron en el Censo 2025 de personas que viven en situación de calle. El ejercicio se realizó en mayo durante cuatro jornadas consecutivas. Participaron 16 instituciones con acompañamiento de la Comisión de Derechos Humanos.

Más de 500 servidores públicos recibieron capacitación y sensibilización previa. La ciudad se dividió en 196 polígonos operativos. Los recorridos se definieron conforme a sectores y cuadrantes de la Secretaría de Seguridad Ciudadana (SSC) de la ciudad de México (Cdmx).

El censo identificó concentración superior a 60 por ciento en Cuauhtémoc, Venustiano Carranza, Iztacalco e Iztapalapa. El diagnóstico evidenció carencias en documentación oficial de identidad. La información orientó el refuerzo de servicios sociales.

Refuerzo de atención social

Con base en los resultados se fortaleció la operación de los Centros de Asistencia, Cuidado e Integración Social (CACIS). También se amplió la capacidad del Centro de Valoración y Canalización (CVC). Ambos espacios ofrecieron alojamiento y atención integral.

En los CACIS se proporcionó alimentación diaria y atención médica básica. El modelo incluyó apoyo psicosocial y acompañamiento institucional. Los servicios buscaron procesos de integración comunitaria.

Actualmente operaron diez CACIS en distintos puntos de la ciudad. Estos centros atendieron a mil 765 usuarios. Los servicios incluyeron pernocta, rehabilitación y atención en salud mental. –sn–

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#NoticiasMX #PeriodismoParaTi #PeriodismoParaTiSociedadNoticias #atenciónSocialCdmx #CACIS #Cdmx #CdmxInvierno #CVC #DerechosHumanos #IAPP #Información #InformaciónMéxico #México #Morena #noticia #noticias #NoticiasMéxico #NoticiasSociedad #operativoInvernal #poblaciónEnSituaciónDeCalle #Sebien #SeciedadNoticiasCom #SN #Sociedad #SociedadNoticias #SociedadNoticiasCom #sociedadNoticias #SociedadNoticiasCom

Im Zeichen des Omnibus: Der IAPP Europe DPC 2025

Während der IAPP Europe Data Protection Congress in Brüssel lief, veröffentlichte die EU-Kommission den digitalen Omnibus. Der Verordnungsentwurf beherrschte den Kongress am 19. und 20. November.
Änderungen an der DSGVO waren lange undenkbar
Auf dem Kongress im vergangenen Jahr war der „Brussels E(...)
https://www.dr-datenschutz.de/im-zeichen-des-omnibus-der-iapp-europe-dpc-2025/

#IAPP

Im Zeichen des Omnibus: Der IAPP Europe DPC 2025

Top Thema des iapp Europe Data Protection Congress war die Omnibus-Verordnung. Durch den Verordnungsentwurf soll die DSGVO geändert werden.

Dr. Datenschutz

*** IAPP Europe Data Protection Congress ***

Today, @Supervisor Wojciech Wiewiórowski, took part in the panel: "AI High-risk Value Chain: Who is Responsible for What?" at the IAPP Europe Data Protection Congress.

Together with Anahita Valakche, Karolina Gałęzowska and Rocio de la Cruz, the Supervisor discussed the regulatory compliance regime for providers of high-risk AI systems as well as the data protection responsibilities along the value chain from GPAI vendor to final deployer.

The withdrawal of the proposed AI Liability Directive has left a significant gap in the EU’s approach to redress, accountability and legal certainty.

Wojciech Wiewiórowski said: "The most important challenge is regulatory uncertainty. The stakeholders are now faced with navigating a fragmented landscape of national standards and conflicting legal interpretations. This environment fosters inconsistency in liability assessment, creating operational and compliance ambiguities, particularly when AI systems are involved."

The EDPS advocates that victims of damage caused by AI have (now and in the future) access to effective remedies that safeguard their rights and supports the need to avoid leaving them at a disadvantage vis-a-vis deployers and providers. Effective liability rules provide an economic incentive to comply with safety rules and therefore contribute to preventing the occurrence of damage. Similarly, effective legal remedies are also key to promote accountability and safety as a way to fostering trustworthy AI.

"I believe that a harmonised and directly applicable EU approach would offer the most coherent solution, adapting non-contractual civil liability rules to AI and establishing a single, consistent regime that safeguards both innovation and individuals’ rights" added the Supervisor.

#IAPP #DPC25

Weekly output: Bluesky verification, brain-computer interface, Xfinity Mobile, resisting FTC commissioners, Comcast pain points

RIO DE JANEIRO–The organizers of Web Summit Rio have once again seen fit to have me moderate panels at their conference here (with my hotel paid for and my airfare to be reimbursed). And while last year I got away with only doing one panel, this year I have three: a discussion about Web3 possibilities Monday, a session on data privacy Tuesday, and a panel about AI in advertising on Wednesday.

4/21/2025: Bluesky Adds Blue Checks to Verified Accounts, But They’re Not for Sale, PCMag

Bluesky’s management continues to impress me with their thoughtful responses to problems that arise with that decentralized platform.

4/23/2025: I Controlled a Wheelchair With My Mind (Well, I Think I Did), PCMag

The research for this happened three weeks ago at NTT’s Upgrade 2025 conference in San Francisco (with that Japanese telco covering my airfare and lodging), but writing this post took some time. And then my editor had to find time of her own to edit this between all of the news breaking this month.

4/23/2025: Xfinity Mobile’s New Premium Unlimited Plan Doubles Data Without a Price Hike, PCMag

I felt a little confused covering a story about Comcast that did not involve a service costing more–especially coming a day after T-Mobile announced a rate rewrite that looks like it will amount to a large cost increase for many users.

4/24/2025: The FTC Commissioners That Trump Wants to Fire: We’re Not Going Away, PCMag

I spent Wednesday and Thursday at the privacy trade group IAPP’s annual conference in D.C. thinking that Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel interviewing Rebecca Slaughter and Alvaro Bedoya, the two members of the Federal Trade Commission that Trump wants gone, would be the newsiest part. And so it was.

4/25/2025: Comcast Execs: Our Pricing Is Opaque and We Can Be Hard to Do Business With, PCMag

Because I was busy getting ready for IAPP Thursday morning, I missed the Comcast earnings call that featured executives admitting the “pain points” the company had created with its customers. Fortunately, nobody else at PCMag picked up the story before I could get to it Friday.

#blueCheck #blueCheckmark #bluecheck #Bluesky #BlueskyVerification #brainComputerInterface #Comcast #ComcastRates #FederalTradeCommision #FTC #IAPP #NTT #NTTUpgrade2025 #pricingTransparency #RebeccaSlaughter #wheelchair #Xfinity #XfinityMobile

Web Summit Rio – Rob Pegoraro

Posts about Web Summit Rio written by robpegoraro

Rob Pegoraro

10 Tips for Global Compliance with #Privacy and #DataProtection Laws

By the #IAPP Privacy Bar Section Advisory Board 2024

@privacy_news @iapp

“Governance is méér dan compliance”, vertelt Ashley Casovan, managing director van het AI Governance Center van de International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP).
https://www.agconnect.nl/maatschappij/artificial-intelligence/ai-governance-wacht-op-standaarden-gedragscodes-en-praktijk
#AI #AIgovernance #IAPP
#AGConnect #SijthoffMedia
AI-governance, wachten op standaarden, gedragscodes en praktijktoetsing

Wetenschappelijk en technologisch bekeken, is AI niet nieuw. Governance is ook niet nieuw. AI-governance is óók niet echt nieuw. Maar toch worstelt de wereld nu met governance van kunstmatige intelligentie. Wet- en regelgevers, data-experts, privacyprofessionals, ethici, AI-ontwikkelaars, techleveranciers en AI-gebruikende organisaties. “Er is sprake van een delta: tussen gebruik van huidige governance op AI, en de sociale overwegingen die nu spelen.”

AG Connect

Wow. Just returning from the #IAPP Privacy, Security, Risk conference, talking about corp & organizational data privacy and risk for 3 days. Just booked a ride home and the confirmation email included -- in the clear -- all cancelled orders from today, including PII, nationally. Impressive #PrivacyFail, even without my bias.

#Privacy #DataProtection

I would like to again humbly request to those running the IAPP website to not force people to turn on JavaScript in order to access said website's content.

#IAPP #Privacy

No.

no no no no no no

bad IAPP website

go to your corner and think about what you did

then get back to your computer and make your website functional with JavaScript turned off

#IAPP #privacy #JavaScript #accessibility

I’m heading to Dulles before dawn tomorrow, but not for work: I’m flying to Dallas to try to see the solar eclipse, a friend having invited people to visit for the occasion. Please wish us luck with the weather!

4/3/2024: Ad Industry Unbothered by Federal Privacy Law (Because It’ll Probably Never Happen), PCMag

I wrote this from the Interactive Advertising Bureau’s Public Policy and Legal Summit mindful of my past excessive optimism about Congress passing a comprehensive privacy law–and then Sunday brought news of another such attempt, the introduction of the American Privacy Rights Act by Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R.-Wash.) and Sen. Maria Cantwell (D.-Wash.). I would love to see this headline age as badly as the one PCMag ran above a January 2023 post of mine–“Is This the Year Congress Finally Tackles Privacy Legislation?”–but I’m not going to get my hopes up just yet.

4/3/2024: FCC to Try Again on Net-Neutrality Rules at April 25 Meeting, PCMag

Speaking of tech-policy stories that have been going on forever, I wrote about the latest twist in the net-neutrality plot: the Federal Communications Commission’s scheduled date to vote for rules reinstating strong rules along the lines of the net-neutrality regulations it passed in 2015 and then smashed the “delete” key on in 2017.

4/5/2024: In this California valley, machine vision meets grapevines, Fast Company

I did some of my most scenic reporting in Sonoma County two weeks ago to check out how one vineyard there is applying robotics and electric-vehicle technology to tend its vines in a greener way–while collecting much more data about them along the way.

4/5/2024: Facebook Really, Really Doesn’t Want You to Read This One Story, PCMag

I was going to spend Thursday afternoon writing about an exceptionally-informative panel about the hazards of age-verification requirements that I’d watched at the International Association of Privacy Professional’s Global Privacy Summit, but then I saw Bluesky lighting up with posts about Facebook not only blocking a Kansas Reflector op-ed critical of its downranking of climate-change discussions and then bulk-deleting every Facebook post sharing any link to the Reflector’s site. The story got increasingly bizarre as I exchanged e-mails with two editors at that publication–one of 39 funded around the U.S. by the nonprofit States Newsroom–while Meta limited its PR efforts to a vague and unhelpful tweet from publicist Andy Stone. Only on Saturday did it get into more specifics, in the form of a series of replies to Bluesky posts by Instagram head Adam Mosseri in which he said the problem was a phishing-site filter going awry.

4/6/2024: How manufacturing is discovering new virtuous circles as it moves toward a more circular economy, Fast Company

The last piece I wrote for the Most Innovative Companies project–I did the interview for this from National Airport on my way to Barcelona for MWC Feb. 23, then wrote and filed it from Newark Airport a few hours later–was also the last to be published.

https://robpegoraro.com/2024/04/07/weekly-output-online-advertising-and-privacy-net-neutrality-vote-vineyard-robotics-meta-content-moderation-run-amok-manufacturing-gone-green/

#circularEconomy #cleantech #FacebookBlockingLinks #FacebookContentModeration #FCC #greentech #IAB #IAPP #KansasReflector #netNeutrality #onlinePrivacy #privacyLaw #sustainability

Total Solar Eclipse 2024