AK Digitaler Wandel

@AKDiWa@bonn.social
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Der Arbeitskreis Digitaler Wandel der Grünen Bonn.
Webhttps://gruene-bonn.de/partei/arbeitskreise/arbeitskreis-digitaler-wandel/
Herzliche Einladung zu einer spannenden KI-Veranstaltung! https://gruenlink.de/2mvw
Arbeitskreis Digitaler Wandel

Der Arbeitskreis Digitaler Wandel nimmt traurig Abschied von Victor Venema, der am 3. Dezember unerwartet und viel zu früh verstorben ist. Unseren Nachruf findet ihr auf unserer Seite https://gruene-bonn.de/partei/arbeitskreise/arbeitskreis-digitaler-wandel/. Da Victor diesen Mastodon-Account betreut hat, wird es hier in nächster Zeit leider leiser werden.
Arbeitskreis Digitaler Wandel

‼️ Kritische #Infrastrukturen
‼️ (#KRITIS)
‼️ besser schützen

📅 Montag, 28. Nov. 22
🕖 19:30 - 20:30 Uhr

https://gruene-nrw.de/termin/webinar_infrastruktur/

▶️ Dr. Irene Mihalic @IreneMihalic
▶️ Dr. Julia Höller

mit
▶️ Manuel Atug @HonkHase

Moderation
▶️ Yazgülü Zeybek

Welche Maßnahmen kann der Staat ergreifen, um den #Schutz Kritischer Infrastrukturen zu stärken? Welche Rolle haben die Betreiber von Kritischen Infrastrukturen? kann sich jede Einzelne auf den Ausfall solcher #KRITIS vorbereiten?

#ITSicherheit #Verantwortung

Webinar: Kritische Infrastrukturen besser schützen | GRÜNE NRW

Frankreich verbietet kostenloses Microsoft 365 und Google Workspace an Schulen​

Der französische Bildungsminister hat Schulen den Einsatz der kostenlosen Edu-Versionen der Office-Pakete untersagt. Sie stünden nicht in Einklang mit EU-Recht.

https://www.heise.de/news/Frankreich-verbietet-kostenloses-Microsoft-365-und-Google-Workspace-an-Schulen-7347596.html

Frankreich verbietet kostenloses Microsoft 365 und Google Workspace an Schulen​

Der französische Bildungsminister hat Schulen den Einsatz der kostenlosen Edu-Versionen der Office-Pakete untersagt. Sie stünden nicht in Einklang mit EU-Recht.

heise online

Related: A 10-point plan to address our information crisis by 2021 Nobel Peace Prize laureates Maria Ressa and Dmitry Muratov https://peoplevsbig.tech/10-point-plan

"Bring an end to the surveillance-for-profit business model ...
End tech discrimination and treat people everywhere equally"

Endorsed by Amnesty International, Privacy International, Transparency International, @digitalcourage, Hate Aid, AVAAZ, Joseph Stiglitz, Frances Haugen, Shoshana Zuboff and @alexandrageese.

A 10-point plan to address our information crisis – People vs. Big Tech

عربي - Nederlands - Français- Deutsch - हिंदी - Italiano - 한국인 - Português - Русский- EspañolPresented by 2021 Nobel Peace Prize laureates Maria Ressa and Dmitry Muratov at the Freedom of Expression Conference, Nobel Peace Center, Oslo 2 September 2022We call for a world in which technology is built in service of humanity and where our global public square protects human rights above profits.Right now, the huge potential of technology to advance our societies has been undermined by the business model and design of the dominant online platforms. But we remind all those in power that true human progress comes from harnessing technology to advance rights and freedoms for all, not sacrificing them for the wealth and power of a few.We urge rights-respecting democracies to wake up to the existential threat of information ecosystems being distorted by a Big Tech business model fixated on harvesting people’s data and attention, even as it undermines serious journalism and polarises debate in society and political life.When facts become optional and trust disappears, we will no longer be able to hold power to account. We need a public sphere where fostering trust with a healthy exchange of ideas is valued more highly than corporate profits and where rigorous journalism can cut through the noise.Many governments around the world have exploited these platforms’ greed to grab and consolidate power. That is why they also attack and muzzle the free press. Clearly, these governments cannot be trusted to address this crisis. But nor should we put our rights in the hands of technology companies’ intent on sustaining a broken business model that actively promotes disinformation, hate speech and abuse.The resulting toxic information ecosystem is not inevitable. Those in power must do their part to build a world that puts human rights, dignity, and security first, including by safeguarding scientific and journalistic methods and tested knowledge. To build that world, we must:Bring an end to the surveillance-for-profit business modelThe invisible ‘editors’ of today’s information ecosystem are the opaque algorithms and recommender systems built by tech companies that track and target us. They amplify misogyny, racism, hate, junk science and disinformation – weaponizing every societal fault line with relentless surveillance to maximize “engagement”. This surveillance-for-profit business model is built on the con of our supposed consent. But forcing us to choose between allowing platforms and data brokers to feast on our personal data or being shut out from the benefits of the modern world is simply no choice at all. The vast machinery of corporate surveillance not only abuses our right to privacy, but allows our data to be used against us, undermining our freedoms and enabling discrimination.This unethical business model must be reined in globally, including by bringing an end to surveillance advertising that people never asked for and of which they are often unaware. Europe has made a start, with the Digital Services and Digital Markets Acts. Now these must be enforced in ways that compel platforms to de-risk their design, detox their algorithms and give users real control. Privacy and data rights, to date largely notional, must also be properly enforced. And advertisers must use their money and influence to protect their customers against a tech industry that is actively harming people.End tech discrimination and treat people everywhere equallyGlobal tech companies afford people unequal rights and protection depending on their status, power, nationality, and language. We have seen the painful and destructive consequences of tech companies’ failure to prioritize the safety of all people everywhere equally. Companies must be legally required to rigorously assess human rights risks in every country they seek to expand in, ensuring proportionate language and cultural competency. They must also be forced to bring their closed-door decisions on content moderation and algorithm changes into the light and end all special exemptions for those with the most power and reach. These safety, design, and product choices that affect billions of people cannot be left to corporations to decide. Transparency and accountability rules are an essential first step to reclaiming the internet for the public good.Rebuild independent journalism as the antidote to tyrannyBig tech platforms have unleashed forces that are devastating independent media by swallowing up online advertising while simultaneously enabling a tech-fueled tsunami of lies and hate that drown out facts. For facts to stand a chance, we must end the amplification of disinformation by tech platforms. But this alone is not enough. Just 13% of the world’s population can currently access a free press. If we are to hold power to account and protect journalists, we need unparalleled investment in a truly independent media persevering in situ or working in exile that ensures its sustainability while incentivizing compliance with ethical norms in journalism.21st century newsrooms must also forge a new, distinct path, recognizing that to advance justice and rights, they must represent the diversity of the communities they serve. Governments must ensure the safety and independence of journalists who are increasingly being attacked, imprisoned, or killed on the frontlines of this war on facts.We, as Nobel Laureates, from across the world, send a united message: together we can end this corporate and technological assault on our lives and liberties, but we must act now. It is time to implement the solutions we already have to rebuild journalism and reclaim the technological architecture of global conversation for all humanity.We call on all rights-respecting democratic governments to:1. Require tech companies to carry out independent human rights impact assessments that must be made public as well as demand transparency on all aspects of their business – from content moderation to algorithm impacts to data processing to integrity policies.2. Protect citizens’ right to privacy with robust data protection laws.3. Publicly condemn abuses against the free press and journalists globally and commit funding and assistance to independent media and journalists under attack.We call on the EU to:4. Be ambitious in enforcing the Digital Services and Digital Markets Acts so these laws amount to more than just ‘new paperwork’ for the companies and instead force them to make changes to their business model, such as ending algorithmic amplification that threatens fundamental rights and spreads disinformation and hate, including in cases where the risks originate outside EU borders.5. Urgently propose legislation to ban surveillance advertising, recognizing this practice is fundamentally incompatible with human rights.6. Properly enforce the EU General Data Protection Regulation so that people’s data rights are finally made reality.7. Include strong safeguards for journalists’ safety, media sustainability and democratic guarantees in the digital space in the forthcoming European Media Freedom Act. 8. Protect media freedom by cutting off disinformation upstream. This means there should be no special exemptions or carve-outs for any organisation or individual in any new technology or media legislation. With globalised information flows, this would give a blank check to those governments and non-state actors who produce industrial scale disinformation to harm democracies and polarise societies everywhere.9. Challenge the extraordinary lobbying machinery, the astroturfing campaigns and recruitment revolving door between big tech companies and European government institutions.We call on the UN to:10. Create a special Envoy of the UN Secretary-General focused on the Safety of Journalists (SESJ) who would challenge the current status quo and finally raise the cost of crimes against journalists.Signed by:Dmitry Muratov, 2021 Nobel Peace Prize laureateMaria Ressa, 2021 Nobel Peace Prize laureateEndorsed by:Amnesty International, 1977 Nobel Peace Prize laureateBeatrice Fihn, Executive Director, ICAN - the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, 2017 Nobel Peace Prize laureateKailash Satyarthi, 2014 Nobel Peace Prize laureateJody Williams, 1997 Nobel Peace Prize laureateProf. Joseph E. Stiglitz, 2001 Nobel Economics Prize laureateJuan Manuel Santos, 2016 Nobel Peace Prize laureateLeymah Gbowee, 2011 Nobel Peace Prize laureateNadia Murad, 2018 Nobel Peace Prize laureateShirin Ebadi, 2003 Nobel Peace Prize laureateTawakkol Karman, 2011 Nobel Peace Prize laureateAlexandra Geese, Member of the European ParliamentDr. Anya Schiffrin, Director of the Technology, Media, and Communications specialization at Columbia University's School of International and Public AffairsBruce Mutsvairo, Associate Professor, Media and Performance Studies, University of UtrechtCan Dundar, Turkish journalist in exileCarole Cadwalladr, Guardian & Observer journalist & co-founder, The Real Facebook Oversight BoardChristophe Deloire, Chair of the Forum on Information and DemocracyDavid Carroll, Associate Professor of Media Design, The New SchoolFrances Haugen, Facebook WhistleblowerGerard Ryle, Director, International Consortium of Investigative JournalistsIrene Khan, UN Special Rapporteur on freedom of expression and opinionJulie Posetti, Deputy Vice President and Global Director of Research, International Center for JournalistsKhadija Patel, Chair of the International Press InstituteMarietje Schaake, Stanford Cyber Policy CenterMogens Blicher Bjerregård, International Advisor, Danish Union of JournalistsPeter Pomerantsev, Senior Fellow, Johns Hopkins UniversityPaul Tang, Member of the European ParliamentPhumzile van Damme, Ethical Tech Activist and Former South Africa MPRoger McNamee, former advisor to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg; author of Zucked: Waking Up to the Facebook CatastropheSafiya Umoja Noble, MacArthur Fellow, Professor, and Author, Algorithms of Oppression: How Search Engines Reinforce RacismShoshana Zuboff, Author, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism; Professor Emeritus Harvard Business School; Co-Chair Steering Committee, International Observatory on Information and DemocracyStaffan I. Lindberg, Professor of Political Science, University of GothenburgSusie Alegre, Human Rights Lawyer and Author of Freedom to Think: The Long Struggle to Liberate Our MindsWendell Wallach, Co-Director AI and Equality Initiative, The Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs.Access NowAlliance4EuropeAll Out Action FundASEAN Parliamentarians for Human RightsAvaazBUKLOD CSSPBurmese Rohingya Organisation UKCenter for Democracy and TechnologyCentre for Research on Multinational CorporationsCentre for Peace StudiesCorporate Europe ObservatoryDigitalcourage e.V.Digital Society, SwitzerlandDefend DemocracyDemosDeutsche Vereinigung für Datenschutz (DVD)digiQDigital Content NextD64 - Zentrum für Digitalen Fortschritt (Center for Digital Progress)Electronic Frontier Finland (Effi)Elektronisk Forpost NorgeEstonian Human Rights CentreEuropean Center for Not-For-Profit Law (ECNL)European Digital Rights (EDRi)EU DisinfoLabEuropean Federation of Public Service UnionsFair VoteFreedom UnitedFree Expression MyanmarFreemuseFree Press (United States)FoxgloveGlobal Project Against Hate and ExtremismGlobal WitnessHuman Rights WatchHacked OffHateAidI Am Here InternationalIn Defense of Human Rights and Dignity Movement (iDefend) PhilippinesIrish Council of Civil LibertiesKaskoSan Roma CharityKofi Annan FoundationLarger UsLie DetectorsLuminateMissing Children EuropeMovePHMovement Against Disinformation, PhilippinesNadia’s InitiativeNational Center on Race and Digital Justice (U.S.)Open BritainOpen Rights GroupPanoptykon FoundationPeople vs. Big TechPrivacy InternationalProgressive Voice MyanmarRappler Inc.Ranking Digital RightsReporters Sans FrontièresSimply SecureSocietyInsideStiftung Neue VerantwortungStichting the London StorySUPERRR LabSumofUsThe Civil Liberties Union for Europe (Liberties)The Coalition for Women in JournalismThe Daphne Caruana Galizia FoundationThe Fritt Ord FoundationThe Institute for Strategic DialogueThe Legal Resources CentreThe 'NEVER AGAIN' AssociationThe Real Facebook Oversight BoardThe Signals NetworkTransparency International EUUCLA Center for Critical Internet InquiryVictims Advocate InternationalWaagWeMove EuropeWikimedia Deutschland5 Rights Foundation#jesuislà#ShePersisted*If you'd like to sign the 10-point action plan, email info@peoplevsbig.tech

Aufgedeckt: So kommen russische Fake News auf dein Handy
https://invidious.snopyta.org/watch?v=qXh9fJ2hsu4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qXh9fJ2hsu4

Das komplizierte Problem wird von Aline Abboud von Die Da Oben sehr gut strukturiert, was hilft über Lösungen nach zu denken.

Aufgedeckt: So kommen russische Fake News auf dein Handy

Russische Desinformation macht seit dem Ukraine-Krieg vor allem in Telegram-Channeln die Runde: von Heißer-Herbst- oder AfD-Demos bis in den Deutschen Bundestag hört und sieht man die russischen Narrative. Der Content kommt von prorussischen Influencern, von russischen Trollen aus Trollfabriken oder auch direkt aus dem Kreml - teilweise sogar von Wladimir Putin selbst. Putins Propaganda fällt in Deutschland auf fruchtbaren Boden: Politiker:innen wie Alice Weidel, Sahra Wagenknecht oder Friedrich Merz geben die Narrative wieder und verschaffen ihnen zum Teil eine große Reichweite. Wir sind den Fake News auf den Grund gegangen und haben sie von unseren Handys bis nach Russland verfolgt. Da ist alles Mögliche dabei: Panik vorm Blackout, gefakte Bücherverbrennungen, Lügen über den Ukraine-Krieg, vermeintliche Nazi-Vorfahren von Bundeskanzler Olaf Scholz oder aus dem Zusammenhang gerissene Zitate von Außenministerin Annalena Baerbock. Wie funktioniert die russische Desinformation? Wir erzählen es euch in diesem Video. Darum geht es: 1:47 Desinformationen auf Telegram 4:44 Die Zielgruppe in Deutschland 9:48 Nützliche Idiot:innen 14:24 Putins Influencer 22:00 Trollfabriken 25:57 Unser Faktencheck 28:53 Kremlvertraute 30:18 Der Kreml & die russischen Staatsmedien 36:15 Was unternimmt die Politik? Unsere Quellen findet ihr hier: https://www.funk.net/channel/die-da-oben-12030?document=sowillrusslandunsspalten Im Bundestag ist Feuer drin – aber kaum einer bekommt mit, was DIE DA OBEN! so treiben. Jan Schipmann und Aline Abboud informieren euch über hitzige Debatten aus dem Parlament und liefern euch die Highlights aus dem Zentrum der Macht. Uns gibt es auch auf Instagram (https://instagram.com/die.da.oben) und Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/diedaoben). Schaut gerne vorbei! DIE DA OBEN! wird produziert von funk. funk ist ein Gemeinschaftsangebot der Arbeitsgemeinschaft der Rundfunkanstalten der Bundesrepublik Deutschland (ARD) und des Zweiten Deutschen Fernsehens (ZDF). funk hat auf die datenschutzrechtlichen Bestimmungen dieser Plattform sowie die Erhebung, Analyse und Nutzung von Userdaten keinen Einfluss. Im Rahmen unserer Möglichkeiten gehen wir mit der größten Sensibilität mit Deinen Daten um. Weitere Informationen zum Thema Datenschutz findest Du auf unserer Website: https://www.funk.net/datenschutz​ YEAH! Wir gehören auch zu #funk. Schaut da mal rein: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/funkofficial Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/funk TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@funk Website: https://go.funk.net https://go.funk.net/impressum

DIE DA OBEN! | Invidious

Erste Landung eines #ÖRR Senders im #Fediverse

@swr3 ist jetzt hier 🎉

‼️ MONTAG 21. NOV 2022
‼️ 🕗 20:00 Uhr

▶️ Diskussion und #Austauschabend mit dem #NRW #Justizminister

Liebe
💚 #Bonnerinnen und #Bonner
💚 #Rheinländerinnen und #Rheinländer

🌻 GRÜNE #Rechtspolitik
🌻 Wie geht das,
🌻 Dr. Benjamin Limbach?

🌐 https://gruene-bonn.de/partei/termine/diskussion-und-austauschabend-mit-nrw-justizminister-benjamin-limbach/

Die Ortsverbände
💚 Beuel und
💚 Bonn Mitte laden ein

🗺️ Adenauerallee 37, 53113 Bonn
🗺️ https://osm.org/go/0GIEvFZRw?m=
🗺️ (Haus der ev. Kirche)

🌐 https://wolke.netzbegruenung.de/s/RJTMwbY8GwbRHyH

#Landtag #gruene @gruenenrw

Diskussion und Austauschabend mit NRW-Justizminister Benjamin Limbach

#Google will pay $392m to 40 states in largest ever US privacy settlement after an investigation found the tech company tracked users’ location even after they opted out https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2022/nov/14/google-settlement-40-states-user-location-tracking

"The privacy issue with location tracking affected about 2 billion users of devices that run Google’s Android operating software and hundreds of millions of worldwide iPhone users who rely on Google for maps or search. ...

Even a small amount of location data can reveal a person’s identity and routines"

Google will pay $392m to 40 states in largest ever US privacy settlement

Case is a historic win for consumers after an investigation found the tech company tracked users’ location even after they opted out

The Guardian

Ich bin zwar nicht wirklich #neuhier, aber ich habe jetzt auch meinen privaten Account mal etwas aufgemöbelt. Weil es trotzdem dazu gehört: Ich heiße Christof Stein und bin der Pressesprecher des @bfdi .

Und hier kann ich dann endlich mal über andere Sachen als Datenschutz und Informationsfreiheit schreiben, zum Beispiel Brettspiele und sonstigen Nerdkram 😉