Plus d'info sur IPFS : https://ipfs.io/
PleaseShare is a file-sharing website that aims to decentralize file-sharing through the use of bittorrent, DHT, and webseeds. (https://linuxfr.org/users/mathieui/journaux/presentation-du-projet-pleaseshare-et-sortie-de-la-version-0-5 )
Ori is a distributed file system built for offline operation and empowers the user with control over synchronization operations and conflict resolution. We provide history through light weight snapshots and allow users to verify the history has not been tampered with. Through the use of replication instances can be resilient and recover damaged data from other nodes.
Les pirates sont des utilisateurs de la première heure, en avance sur leur temps. Si vous leur mettez quelque chose de nouveau et brillant entre les mains, ils vous jetteront de l’argent. Inversement, ils seront les premiers à identifier un marché dépassé et l’abandonneront. De plus, ils n’accepteront – jamais – les lois qui les enferment avec un service qu’ils n’ont pas demandé, surtout quand ils peuvent faire la même chose eux-mêmes pratiquement sans aucun effort, comme fabriquer leurs propres copies de films, musiques, jeux ou logiciels avec leur propre matière première et leur travail.
What is uProxy?
uProxy is a browser extension that lets users share alternative more secure routes to the Internet. It's like a personalised VPN service that you set up for yourself and your friends. uProxy helps users protect each other from third parties who may try to watch, block, or redirect users’ Internet connections.
This project is an experiment in enabling people to provide each other with a more secure and private connection to the internet. At the moment, it is under active development and we are interested in working with a limitted number of testers to help develop the tool.
Hier, la Hadopi a publié le premier volet de son étude sur la faisabilité et la pertinence d’un système de rémunération proportionnelle du partage. Cette note dresse un inventaire et une analyse des usages en matière d’accès aux oeuvres sur Internet.
[by Philippe Aigrain (CC-BY-SA)(Link)] An endless stream of law proposals, soft-law initiatives and free-trade agreements keeps trying to eradicate or prevent the non-market sharing of digital works between individuals. New strategies are pushed using incentives and threats so that intermediaries will police the Internet to save the scarcity-based business models of a few from the competition of abundance. So is it business as usual? Well, no longer.
There are strong signs that citizens and digital rights organizations have reached a new maturity in what used to be the “piracy” debate. For many years, they of course stressed the damage that the war against piracy was doing to the Internet, to freedoms and fundamental rights. However, many seemed to have forgotten that the initiators of file sharing … called it file sharing. They feared standing explicitly for its legitimacy and looked for schemes that would buy peace in the war against P2P. They pushed for blanket licensing or licence globale proposals (whether optional or compulsory) that proposed to compensate a limited set of industries (motion picture, phonographic industry and a lesser extent TV) for the harm allegedly caused by unauthorized sharing.
Marc Tessier, membre du Conseil national du numérique (CNN), auteur d’un Rapport sur la numérisation du patrimoine écrit remis au Ministère de la culture et de la communication en 2010.
With bullshits inside
Livre de P.Aigrain, disponible, téléchargable