Un arrêté municipal n’a pas la possibilité de définir une sanction pécunière de type amende administrative. Séparation des pouvoirs.
Un arrêté municipal n’a pas la possibilité de définir une sanction pécunière de type amende administrative. Séparation des pouvoirs.
How
Ce n’est aucunement le cas. Un maire est un administrateur public, et ses pouvoirs sont définis précisément.
Avant que l’arrêté “saute” officiellement il est déjà nul et non avenu.
You wish it were private. Would have saved you from the embarrassment.
The worst enemy of Mozilla is: Mozilla. This hasn’t changed in many years.
Vous êtes partis si loin en oubliant l’essentiel : si législation il doit y avoir sur le sujet, et quelle que soit votre opinion là-dessus, ce n’est pas dans les pouvoirs d’une mairie. Ce genre de décision ne peut être prise qu’au niveau de l’État. Vous semblez croire qu’un maire est un mini-duc qui peut éditer ses mini-lois locales…
Le référendum n’a aucune valeur légale, c’est juste un élément de propagande. Au final c’est quand même juste un arrêté municipal, et les arrêtés municipaux ne peuvent pas décider de tout.
Je suis étonnée qu’on en débatte comme si c’était raisonnable qu’un maire pense avoir à ce point un droit de contrôle sur ce que font ses habitant·es. Ce n’est pas de ses prérogatives et c’est, comme souvent, un exemple de la façon dont les arrêtés municipaux sont pris sans aucune considération pour la loi (qui encadre ce que les arrêtés municipaux peuvent, ou ne peuvent pas, faire).
Peu de surprise que ça émane d’un maire LR. Prochaine étape, il vous dira quel compte suivre, quels réseaux utiliser, quels livres acheter ?
I personally think it’s a very bad idea and politics will catch up on you eventually. But whatever floats your boat.
5-7 trillion and they’ll still end up stealing data from all over the internet.
Quick, everyone go to the new hype Nazi bar! (Well, not so hype anymore)
Sure, that’s the reason. I believe that.
If instances don’t want to federate with some or all other instances, that is their choice, and that’s on purpose. Some just want to have smaller communities, stronger moderation, and sometimes be entirely private.
If you’re looking for instances that federate with most, you should choose yours accordingly. And I think you won’t have an issue with that, because most popular instances chose to go this route.
Because that’s not really how laws work. You don’t add laws over laws to just state the same thing again. Legal books are already fat enough.
Yes, most image search engines are also unlawful. Google knows that firsthand. It’s not because it exists that it’s legal? You seem to believe that.
It’s almost like if big tech corporations don’t care about laws, and the problem is elsewhere?
I don’t know why everybody pretends we need to come up with a bunch of new laws to protect artists and copyright against “AI”. The problem isn’t AI. The problem is data scraping.
An example: Apple’s iOS allows you to record your own voice in order to make it a full speech synthesis, that you can use within the system. It’s currently tooted as an accessibility feature (like, if you have a disability preventing you from speaking out loud all of the time, you can use your phone to speak on your behalf, with your own custom voice). In this case, you provide the data, and the AI processes it on-device over night. Simple. We could also think about an artist making a database of their own works in order to try and come up with new ideas with quick prompts, in their own style.
However, right now, a lot of companies are building huge databases by scraping data from everywhere without consent from the artists that, most of the time, don’t even know their work was scraped. And they even dare to advise that publicly, pretend they have a right to do that, sell those services. That’s stealing of intellectual property, always has been, always will be. You don’t need new laws to get it right. You might need better courts in order to enforce it, depending on which country you live in.
There’s legal use of AI, and unlawful use of AI. If you use what belongs to you and use the computer as a generative tool to make more things out of it: AI good. If you take from others what don’t belong to you in order to generate stuff based on it: AI bad. Thanks for listening to my TED talk.
Can’t go on the Internet, can’t go in public restrooms… Land of freedom.
They have been instructed to take them down and will have to pay a further daily fine for every day they’re not complying (given, the fine is not a way to get away with it, it’s just to make them act quickly on the matter; they could go to court again if they fail to comply in the long run).
It’s not a problem. It’s a great feature. Because there’s more and more servers enforcing a lazy moderation system and spreading a lot of hate out there. And sure, you’re free to do so. But I’m also free to rely on servers that actually protect their users, and they have a right to exist as well.
It’s always baffling to me how people go to great lengths trying to describe the utter freedom of the Fediverse (and decentralized networks as a whole) as something flawed and bad, because they’re brainless and they just think of Lemmy as “the new Reddit” (or Mastodon as “the new Twitter”).
Also known as a random Internet asshole