47 stories
·
0 followers

La chouette de Duolingo condamnée à 2 ans de prison ferme pour harcèlement

1 Share

C’est la fin d’un cauchemar pour plus de 70 millions d’utilisateurs. 2 ans de prison ferme et 75 000€ d’amende, voilà la peine requise contre la chouette de Duolingo au terme d’un procès mouvementé qui aura duré près de 8 heures. Pour Valentin, 28 ans, présent à l’audience ce jour-là, c’est une véritable libération. “Je n’arrive pas à y croire ! Ça y est c’est terminé ! C’est enfin terminé !” s’écrie-t-il les joues couvertes de larmes. “Justice a été rendue ! Ça ne réparera peut être pas ce qui nous a été fait mais comme on dit en italien : No…Non mettere le…los…je…non je sais plus.”

Un harcèlement ciblé et méthodique dont a également fait les frais Caroline, 19 ans. “Ça a commencé avec un message tout simple. « Caroline, rejoignez Duo pour votre session d’espagnol hebdomadaire »”. raconte-t-elle encore sous le choc. “Puis très vite, elle a commencé à compter les jours où l’on ne se voyait pas : « Ça fait 2 jours, 3 jours, 4 jours… ». Au bout de plusieurs mois, elle est même passée au chantage affectif” poursuit-elle, en montrant un message avec écrit « You make Duo sad… » agrémenté d’un emoji tristoune et d’un autre où l’on peut lire « Duo sait où tu vis… » écrit en lettres de sang sur un sac poubelle. 

Un procès mouvementé pendant lequel ladite chouette essaiera de soudoyer les juges en leur proposant des coffres de gemmes en échange de défis amusants comme « détruire les preuves », « ne pas croire un mot des témoins » ou simplement « passer l’éponge ». 

Une ultime tentative de contact qui se soldera par un échec puisqu’une fois la sentence énoncée, c’est entravée par près de 6 policiers qu’elle se fera escorter vers sa cellule en hurlant “C’est une erreur, je suis innocente !” dans plus de 40 langues. 

L’article La chouette de Duolingo condamnée à 2 ans de prison ferme pour harcèlement est apparu en premier sur Le Gorafi.fr Gorafi News Network.

Read the whole story
Share this story
Delete

A Visit to the Swamp: The Town Made Famous by Neo-Nazi Students

2 Shares
An open letter about Hitler salutes in the schoolyard and swastikas on the benches of a school in the municipality of Burg made nationwide headlines in Germany. But is the place really a hotbed of right-wing extremism? We went to find out.

Read the whole story
Share this story
Delete

Insecure vehicles should be banned, not security tools like the Flipper Zero

1 Comment

Article URL: https://saveflipper.ca/

Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39452494

Points: 281

# Comments: 176

Read the whole story
Share this story
Delete
1 public comment
kilpatjr
65 days ago
reply
Apologies for pot stirring, but is this an apt analogy?

"Insecure places like schools should be banned, not security tools like guns."

I’m not quite sure. My gut reaction is to agree with the original headline, but the notion that we should prefer preserving access to offensive tools because our security is perfect doesn’t sound realistic.
Seattle, WA

B.C. helicopter flight lands safely after being hit by lightning, Helijet says

1 Comment and 2 Shares
A blue and white helicopter is pictured on a platform on the water.

A commercial helicopter with 14 people on board landed safely in Victoria on Tuesday after it was hit by lightning.

Read the whole story
Share this story
Delete
1 public comment
kilpatjr
183 days ago
reply
There was lightning in Victoria?
Seattle, WA

Musk’s X revokes paid blue check from United Auto Workers after strike called

1 Comment and 2 Shares
Musk’s X revokes paid blue check from United Auto Workers after strike called

Enlarge (credit: Nathan Howard / Stringer | Getty Images North America)

Last night when the clock struck midnight, nearly 13,000 workers at Ford, General Motors, and Stellantis went on strike after the so-called "Big Three" car companies failed to reach an agreement with United Auto Workers (UAW). By Friday morning, UAW discovered that X, the platform formerly known as Twitter—in what appeared to be a petty move by platform owner and Tesla CEO Elon Musk—had stripped their account's verified status, The Intercept reported.

The move seemingly makes it harder for UAW to maximize reach for its posts on X, just as workers have begun striking, demanding better wages and other benefits.

Ford has claimed that the deal UAW was negotiating would have doubled automaker labor costs, and the Intercept noted that often wage increases won by union workers "trickle down" to non-unionized workers like Tesla's. That perhaps worried Musk, who seemingly has a financial interest in keeping autoworker wages low and a history of union-busting. Earlier this year, Musk lost a court battle and had to delete a tweet that threatened Tesla workers attempting to unionize.

A UAW official told The Intercept that the union had paid for X verification and confirmed that the account had been marked as verified until earlier today when UAW said it was removed without any notification from X.

By midday Friday, UAW's verified check was reinstated. The Intercept's reporter, Ryan Grim, posted on X, writing, "Elon put the blue check back up. Maybe the Big Three will fold this fast too."

To a request for comment, X only sent Ars an auto-response, saying, "Busy now, please check back later." (To be fair, in this case "check back later" is a good summary of what happened.)

According to Axios, Tesla pays lower wages than the Big Three automakers currently faced with striking workers, with Tesla paying "an estimated labor cost of $45 to $50 per hour" compared to "about $64 to $67 per hour."

In a post on X, Musk claimed that Tesla pays more than UAW's required wages.

"We pay more than the UAW btw, but performance expectations are also higher," Musk said. "Quite a few of our factory techs who work on the line have become millionaires over the years from company stock grants."

Musk's stake in the strike could go beyond wage questions, though. UAW's negotiations also seek to expand benefits for union workers involved "in the production of electric vehicles and the batteries needed to power them," The Intercept reported, and those conversations could also impact Tesla operations.

On top of the backlash over Musk's union-busting tweet, Tesla has a history of violating labor laws.

The company previously was found in violation of labor laws for banning workers from wearing pro-union shirts. Last year, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ordered Tesla to revise its policies "to make clear that it does not prohibit production associates from wearing black union shirts."

There was also tension earlier this year when Tesla Autopilot Buffalo-based workers tried to unionize, alleging that they were being treated "like robots" and pressured to skip bathroom breaks.

And most recently in April, the NLRB again ruled that Tesla violated labor laws when managers at an Orlando repair shop illegally silenced workers attempting to discuss pay and working conditions, Reuters reported.

Whether X was really attempting to limit reach of UAW's posts at a critical moment—or there is some other possible justification for removing the verification—is still unknown. But UAW didn't let the setback stop it from returning to the platform to amplify strikers' demands as soon as the blue check was back.

In the moments after X reinstated UAW's verification, the union began posting in support of strikers in Ohio and Missouri, some of them chanting, "No justice, no jeeps!"

Read Comments

Read the whole story
Share this story
Delete
1 public comment
kilpatjr
224 days ago
reply
I'm no fan of Musk, but the UAW does not appear to have been singled out here. They changed their profile photo, which apparently causes a temporary suspension of verified status.

As the [article](https://theintercept.com/2023/09/15/uaw-strike-twitter-verification-elon-musk/) that was evidently the main source of this article says: "This article was updated to include information about a Twitter policy to temporarily remove checkmarks from verified accounts that change their profile pictures."



Nothing to see here...
Seattle, WA
sfrazer
223 days ago
Of course, they likely could have avoided the bad press if they had a functional communications department...

Remote Work Brings Hidden Penalty for Young Professionals, Study Says

1 Comment

Article URL: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/24/business/remote-work-feedback.html

Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35686121

Points: 94

# Comments: 181

Read the whole story
Share this story
Delete
1 public comment
kilpatjr
367 days ago
reply
“The career penalty for remote work may be greatest for women, young people and people of color, who often lack the professional networks that being in the office can help provide.”
Seattle, WA
Next Page of Stories