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How unusual would it be for South Korea to arrest its deposed president? Not as unusual as you might think

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For decades, South Korean leaders such as ousted former President Park Geun-hye and those in their orbits have endured criminal inquiries, embarrassing scandals, even prison time.
For decades, South Korean leaders such as ousted former President Park Geun-hye and those in their orbits have endured criminal inquiries, embarrassing scandals, even prison time.
It’s almost a rite of passage in this relatively young democracy.
Since the mid-1990s, two former leaders received lengthy prison sentences. Another committed suicide by jumping into a ravine after questioning by prosecutors. Still others have left under clouds of suspicion about corruption among relatives or friends.
Few have escaped untarnished by scandal — both a testament to the country’s struggles with corruption and also perhaps to its burgeoning commitment to the rule of law.
Now Park also faces the prospect of jail time after prosecutors on Monday sought her arrest on as part of a sprawling corruption investigation that forced the scandal-marred politician from office earlier this month. She remains free and had no comment about the decision.
Prosecutors have asked a court for permission to detain the former president — whose father ruled South Korea as a military strongman as the country emerged as an economic force in the 1960s and 1970s — pending an indictment related to 13 allegations. They include bribery, abuse of power, coercion and disclosures of confidential information.
The allegations against Park are long-simmering and have upended the nation’s political order, prompting historic street protests for months.
The prosecution’s effort sparked a variety of reactions among South Koreans on Monday inside and outside the country’s institutions of power.
For some, like Younkyoo Kim, a professor at Hanyang University in Seoul, a nagging question lingers: “Why do Korean presidents keep on making these kinds of mistakes?”
Theories abound.
Some say the presidency itself, crafted in the late 1980s to be democratic but maintain a strong leader during a continuing warlike posture with North Korea, requires constitutional reform. Proposed changes are stalled in the National Assembly.
Others point to decades of collusion — both real and perceived — between the country’s powerful family-controlled conglomerates, known as chaebol , and political leaders, including the president. Despite years of progress in reforming their influence, solutions remain elusive amid concern about maintaining South Korea’s export-driven economy, among Asia’s largest.
Park was the nation’s first female president and the first democratically elected leader to be removed by impeachment. However her saga ends, Park’s name will be added to a list of troubled South Korean presidencies.
The nation emerged from the Korean War under Syngman Rhee, a strongman who fled the country in 1960 amid a popular uprising. He died in Hawaii in 1965. The following two decades were largely led by Park’s father, Park Chung-hee, who ruled as a strongman until his assassination by the nation’s spy chief in 1979.
The country began allowing direct election of presidents in the late 1980s, when mass protests threatened to cast a shadow over the Summer Olympics in Seoul.
Two other former leaders, Chun Doo-hwan and his successor, Roh Tae-woo, were charged in the mid-1990s — after they left office — with improperly collecting tens of millions of dollars from businesses during their tenures. The two men, former army colleagues, also faced sedition charges related to Chun’s coup and an earlier violent crackdown against pro-democracy protesters in a southern province.
Chun and Roh received sentences of life and 17 years in prison, respectively, but were later pardoned.
Another former president, Roh Moo-hyun, committed suicide by jumping from a cliff in 2009. He had left office after prosecutors questioned him about alleged crimes by family members. He previously had survived a highly politicized impeachment vote amid allegations that his public support for a new political party in legislative elections violated constitutional provisions under South Korean law mandating presidential impartiality.
Other presidents have seen family members charged amid allegations of influence peddling, an endemic problem, some believe, in South Korea, where government ties to businesses generations ago propelled the economy to its current heights.
Some say reform, perhaps switching to a parliamentary system that might shift power to a prime minister and cabinet ministries, is needed.
“It’s that strong presidency that’s the problem because as soon as a president is elected, everybody immediately starts to check their Rolodex,” said Michael Breen, author of “The Koreans: Who They Are, What They Want, Where Their Future Lies,” which chronicles decades of the country’s triumphs and scandals.
“‘Oh, I went to university with his cousin. Bingo.’ Those sorts of connections, or the perception of connections, allow for all sorts of advantage.”
In Park’s case, a combination of these government critiques seems to have been at play in her swift downfall, which began in earnest last fall after the disclosure that she allowed a confidant, a woman with no government title, access to sensitive government documents, including drafts of important speeches.
Prosecutors later alleged that the confidant, Choi Soon-sil, used her influence with the president — with Park’s knowledge — to extort contributions from business titans to firms she controlled. The bribery allegations involve whether Park helped direct approval for a controversial Samsung Group merger in exchange for payments to firms controlled by Choi.
“The suspect has used her status as a president to receive money from companies and interfered with the freedom of business management,” said a statement from the prosecutors in announcing their arrest warrant application.
The National Assembly had already impeached Park in December, and a court upheld that vote earlier this month. A May 9 snap election will select her successor, while the prime minister remains the acting head of state.
Long under suspicion, Park had enjoyed immunity from criminal charges while in office, and two sets of prosecutors and the impeachment court had been unable to compel her to answer their questions. Now living as a private citizen in Seoul’s wealthy Gangnam district, however, Park finally submitted last week.
„I feel apologetic toward the nation’s citizens,” she told a sea of reporters after arriving to meet the prosecutors. “I’ll cooperate in the questioning sincerely.”
Park did, sitting for roughly 14 hours of questioning that day. Prosecutors said she denied most of the criminal allegations, but they sought her arrest to prevent the destruction of evidence. They also said it would be unfair for her to avoid detention while others who “followed her direction” remain jailed.
That list includes perhaps South Korea’s most-powerful man, Samsung Electronics vice chair Lee Jae-yong, the tech giant’s heir apparent whose net worth is estimated at $6 billion.
Park’s arrest, if approved after a hearing planned for Thursday, would be the latest twist in the high-profile corruption investigation that has led to charges against more than two dozen other people, including several Park aides. Other chaebol chiefs have faced questions in recent weeks about payments they made to Choi.
The news that Park now faces jail is hardly surprising to many who have followed South Korean politics or its latest scandal, which played out in detail in the media for months. Some say they would have been angry otherwise, and they hope the move signals progress.
“I felt relieved,” said Seoul resident Kim Ji Hong, 24. “I wanted to shout, ‘I can still live here!’”
Public polls suggest that residents such as Kim might reject any candidate from Park’s former conservative ruling party, which has since splintered, making the election of a more liberal candidate a possibility for the first time in nearly a decade.
A change in ideology for South Korea’s powerful chief executive could shift the nation’s policy on North Korea and its posture with the United States on regional security.
The reaction from political spokesman for the country’s main political parties was relatively muted, with expressions of understanding for the prosecution’s steps to regret that the scandal has upset the people.
A spokesman for the conservative Righteous Party, which split from Park’s Liberty Korea over the impeachment vote, noted concern that yet another president faces criminal scrutiny and perhaps jail.
„We hope former President Park will offer a sincere apology and show a sincere reflection of her wrongdoing before the people,“ Rep. Oh Shin-hwan said.
Stiles is a special correspondent.
The strange journey of a Chinese Internet addict — from cybercafes to pole dancing

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© Source: http://www.latimes.com/world/asia/la-fg-south-korea-arresting-presidents-20170327-story.html
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小学生死亡事故で88歳運転手を不起訴 “認知症の影響”

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去年、 横浜市で軽トラックが通学中の 小学生の 列に突っ込み、 男の 子1人が死亡した事故で、 過失運転致死傷の 疑いで逮捕された88歳の 運転手について、 …
去年、横浜市で軽トラックが通学中の小学生の列に突っ込み、男の子1人が死亡した事故で、過失運転致死傷の疑いで逮捕された88歳の運転手について、検察は、認知症の影響で長時間運転を続けてしまい、その結果、運転能力が失われていた可能性を否定できないとして、31日に嫌疑不十分で不起訴にしました。 去年10月、横浜市港南区の路上で軽トラックが小学生の列に突っ込み、1年生の田代優くん(6)が死亡したほか、小学生4人を含む7人が重軽傷を負いました。軽トラックを運転していた88歳の男の運転手は過失運転致死傷の疑いで逮捕され、専門家による鑑定のあと、処分保留で釈放されていました。 これまでの調べで、運転手は事故前日に自宅を車で出たあと横浜市や都内などをおよそ24時間走行していましたが、「どこをどう走ったか覚えていない」と供述していて、検察によりますと、鑑定の結果、認知症と診断されたということです。 検察は、運転手は認知症の影響で運転を長時間続けてしまい、疲労が重なった結果、適切なブレーキ操作などの運転能力が失われていた可能性を否定できず、過失を問うことは難しいとして、31日嫌疑不十分で不起訴にしました。

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© Source: http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/html/20170331/k10010932821000.html
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В Киеве уже завтра завершается отопительный сезон

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Отопительный сезон в столице завершается с 1 апреля.
Киевские власти приняли решение завершить текущий отопительный сезон в столице с 1 апреля.
Как сообщили в пресс-службе Киевской городской государственной администрации, соответствующее распоряжение КГГА от 31.03.17 № 368 подписал Киевский городской голова Виталий Кличко.
Заместитель председателя КГГА Петр Пантелеев отметил, что „прогноз погоды, который мы получили от Украинского гидрометцентра, свидетельствует о том, что с 1 апреля и в последующие дни среднесуточная температура будет больше +8 градусов. Периодов резкого похолодания, которые, например, наблюдались в марте, гидрометцентр не прогнозирует“.
Также Пантелеев заявил, что получено почти три тысячи обращений от киевлян, которые просят уже отключить отопление, поскольку стоимость этой услуги чрезвычайно высока.
„Поэтому мы используем каждую возможность для экономии киевлян. В этом году отопительный сезон завершится еще раньше по сравнению с предыдущим годом“, – отметил он.
По его словам, решение о сворачивании системы отопления должно быть максимально взвешенным, поскольку сама система теплоснабжения Киева достаточно инертна. Завершение отопительного сезона, как и его старт, продолжается около семи дней. „Технически невозможно в течение одного дня отключить отопление, а затем снова его включить, поэтому мы учитывали как текущие, так и перспективные температурные данные“, – отметил Пантелеев.

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© Source: http://telegraf.com.ua/ukraina/mestnyiy/3242359-v-kieve-uzhe-zavtra-zavershaetsya-otopitelnyiy-sezon.html
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Опалювальний сезон у Києві буде завершено першого квітня

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Відповідне розпорядження підписав київський міський голова Віталій Кличко.
„Ми прийняли рішення про те, що з 1 квітня опалювальний сезон у столиці завершується. Відповідне розпорядження підписав мер. Підстави для такого рішення нам дають і прогнози погоди, і численні звернення людей, які просять вимкнути тепло“, – написав він у Facebook.
За його словами, на згортання системи опалення таких масштабів, як київська, потрібно кілька днів.
На початку лютого повідомлялося, що за результатами перевірок столичної Житлово-комунальної інспекції, платіжки за опалення будуть перераховані для 48 тисяч київських сімей.
В результаті перевірки були виявлені типові причини нарахування високих сум: період нарахувань більше одного календарного місяця; невідповідність опалювальних площ; ненадання жителями показань квартирних лічильників; зняття показань теплових лічильників ПАТ Київенерго без залучення представників будинків.

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© Source: http://dt.ua/UKRAINE/opalyuvalniy-sezon-u-kiyevi-bude-zaversheno-pershogo-kvitnya-238248_.html
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Dimnie Trojan targeting open source developers publishing on Github

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Trojan targeting developers steals passwords, exfiltrates files, takes screenshots and can even self-destruct when it has served its purpose,Security,Open Source,Developer,Software,Hacking,Threats and Risks ,Cloud Computing,malware,open source,Palo Alto Networks,Github,Rapid7
Developers using Github, the free source-code hosting website, have been targeted by malware that can steal passwords, download files, take screenshots of sensitive information and even self-destruct afterwards – and the malware has been around since 2014.
Call the Dimnie Trojan, according to Palo Alto Networks researchers it appears to have undergone few changes since it made its debut in 2014, but has largely flown under the radar until recently because it had focused on Russian targets.
Palo Alto Networks first became aware of it in mid-January following reports that the owners of several Github repositories been targeted with phishing emails. The emails included requests for help with development projects, and offers of payment for custom programming jobs. Unlike most phishing emails, these were very specifically targeted at the interests of their recipients.
The emails had .gz (gzipped) attachments that contained Word documents with malicious macro code attached. The file uses Microsoft PowerShell commands to download and execute payloads.
Once executed, the PowerShell script reaches out to a remote server and downloads the malware program known as Dimnie.
The software gives attackers a range of capabilities that it can tailor depending on its target. This includes keylogging, screenshotting, interacting with smartcards and exfiltrating data from a computer. There’s also a self-destruct module that removes all files from the system drive to ensure that there is no trace of the malware if someone goes looking for it.
It goes unnoticed by Windows because of additional unnecessary characters in its code. Security software is tricked into thinking the threat is no longer an issue via a number of methods, including the ability to capture data using web requests that appear to be sent to Google-owned domains. Instead, the information is sent to an address controlled by the attackers.
Data stolen is encrypted and appended to image headers during transit. They are never written to the hard drive of the infected computer, instead Dimnie loads the code directly in to the memory.
The researchers did not suggest who could be behind the campaign or the motivation for targeting open-source developers. However, Tod Beardsley, research director at Rapid7, suggested that open-source developers were an attractive target for malware because they work on libraries and utilities that end up on millions of devices worldwide.
„It’s a great reminder that developers who are publishing code, as a class, do need to stay extra vigilant when handling binaries from unknown sources,“ he said.
But he warned that such vigilance might be at odds with the typical helpfulness that’s common to many open source communities.
„While it might be uncomfortable to be less helpful to strangers, developers need to protect their users as well as themselves from these kinds of social engineering attacks,“ he said.
He added that the most obvious ‘red flag‘ with the phishing emails was the gzipped Microsoft Word document as Microsoft Word users will rarely, if ever, use gzip as it’s much more of a Linux tool used for compression.

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© Source: http://www.computing.co.uk/ctg/news/3007592/dimnie-trojan-malware-targeting-open-source-developers-publishing-code-on-github
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A UK entrepreneur takes flight by attaching miniature jet engines to his limbs

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A YouTube collection of grainy video clips highlights the progress Gravity founder Richard Browning has made toward his outlandish dream over the past year…
A YouTube collection of grainy video clips highlights the progress Gravity founder Richard Browning has made toward his outlandish dream over the past year. Each seems more terrifying than the last, with multiple jet engines attached to his limbs in various configurations, as he hovers a few feet from the ground.
The press material attached to the announcement heralds the oil trader turned entrepreneur as a real life Iron Man, but it’s hard to shake the feeling that you’re watching some sort of backyard mad scientist, a few moments away from the world’s most dangerous Jack Ass stunt. Browning acknowledges how downright alarming the footage of the Daedelus rig appears, but shakes off any notion that he’s actually in danger at any point during the three-and-a-half minute package.
“I can just strap this thing on and go flying at a moment’s notice,” he told TechCrunch in a phone interview this week. “It’s less dangerous than riding a sports bike through the countryside.” Browning rattles off a list of safety precautions with the excitement of a child attempting to convince a parent about the safety of some ill-advised new toy. He adds that he has yet to injure himself during operation.
The top speed of the current configuration isn’t any faster than a human running pace, Browning explains, and the aviation fuel was chosen specifically for its non-explosive qualities. The craft never hovers more than a few meters above the ground by design and there’s an unfortunately named dead man’s switch he has to keep pressed at all times to continue operation.
“If I fell in some imaginably bad way and somehow burst my robust fuel system, I would just leak it very slowly on the floor,” he explains. “If I spent a lot of effort trying to somehow ignite that and it finally caught fire, I’ve got a fireproof suit underneath my kit and I’m never more than 30 feet from two people with fire extinguishers. So actually, it’s really quite lame in that sense, which was done deliberately. It’s no way as dangerous or crazy as it looks.“
It is, however, quite the spectacle. Even in stealth mode, the company has managed to attract the interest of investors and partners like Red Bull, which has been documenting Browning’s journey with far more stylized video of his early attempts. The rig’s inventor insists that he never had commercial ambitions for the Daedelus, that the flight suit was only intended to answer the question of “what if?”
Browning funded the project himself for the first nine months of its gestation, taking it from his initial conception of a flapping drone — only to have his thunder stolen by similar ongoing research at Oxford University — to something more akin to its current configuration.
“We pivoted the idea,” he explains. “We stuck with the idea of the human mind and body as being the core of it, but added in a little bit of horsepower. We played around with electric drone fans, but the power to weight ratio isn’t there, so we went to gas turbines.”
In its near final form, the suit offers a new take on the traditional jet-pack idea, offering the user more degrees of control and a potentially more natural interface by transferring mobility to the limbs. Browning likens it to riding a bike. “If you let go,” he says, “your brain does the rest.”
Of course, the rig’s got plenty of trials ahead of it. And for the time being, the only application that Browning anticipates for the Daedelus is sheer visual spectacle. Recreation use could be somewhere down the line for thrill seekers with $200,000 to burn on a suit. And maybe somewhere off in the distance, it has the potential to help EVAC teams navigate difficult to reach locales. For now, however, it’s just about the show.
And as for the name, Browning admits that “Daedelus” can use a bit of work, both with regards to its unpronouncability and the popular Greek myth tied to the name. “I’m going to blame my eight-year-old [son],” says Browning. Most of the Greek heroes have something lurking in the closet. But Daedelus, so my son tells me, was a renowned craftsman and innovator.”
But Daedelus’ best known story involves letting his son Icarus fly too close to the sun. It’s a tough metaphor to shake off for an inventor who is strapping a bunch of jet engines to his limbs. But Browning is unperturbed. Sure, the company is planning to give the next model a more straightforward title, but the entrepreneur laughs off the Icarus comparisons. In fact, he’s even working on a miniature version for his kids that trades the jet engines for something less aggressive.
“We’re messing around and seeing if we can adapt a couple of drone fans,” he says. “We’re going to mock up something for my boys, so they’ve got a sort of quiet, cold version of the same thing that they can leap around with.”

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React JavaScript library gets an IDE

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The Reactide tool works with a Node server to manage state across components
React, Facebook’s JavaScript library for building UIs , is getting a dedicated IDE for web development, called Reactide.
Offered by developers calling themselves Team Reactide, the IDE serves as a cross-platform desktop application that provides a custom browser simulator; build tool and server configuration become unnecessary, the project description said. Team Reactide said the IDE, offered under an MIT license, was the first ever for dedicated React web development.
Reactide is build tool-agnostic and runs an integrated Node server along with the browser simulator. The IDE helps manage state across React components, visualizing state flow. Developers can navigate through a live representation of a project architecture and edit components, and the process of having to transpile every minor edit to a project becomes instant. „By cross-utilizing Reactide’s tools, properties and styles can be edited through straightforward GUI controls that provide immediate feedback in the browser simulator,“ Team Reactide said.
Also known as React.js, open source React is declarative and component-based, and it provides the ability to develop new features without having to rewrite existing code. Facebook has offered its own tooling for React, called React Developer Tools , serving as a Chrome DevTools extension for inspecting React component hierarchies.
Meanwhile, other tools in the JavaScript vein have been positioned as rivals to React, including Vue.js and Inferno. A companion framework, React Native , lets developers build native mobile apps using React, with server-side rendering via Node. React Native has attracted development of a React Native-specific IDE, Deco , as well as Facebook and Expo’s own CRNA (Create React Native App) tool.
More about Facebook MIT

© Source: http://www.computerworld.com.au/article/616976/react-javascript-library-gets-an-ide/?utm_medium=rss&utm_source=sectionfeed
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Matternet cleared to fly blood samples in delivery drones over Swiss cities

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The Swiss Federal Office for Civil Aviation (FOCA) has granted Matternet a certification allowing their delivery drones to fly autonomously over cities at any..
The Swiss Federal Office for Civil Aviation (FOCA) has granted Matternet a certification allowing their delivery drones to fly autonomously over cities at any time of day or night. Clearing this regulatory hurdle means that by early next year, Matternet partner Swiss Post plans to use the drones to deliver blood samples and other small parcels between hospitals in Lugano, a smaller city with a population of about 56,000.
Matternet CEO and cofounder Andreas Raptopoulos said, “This is a big milestone for us. It means we can operate our technology throughout Switzerland. This will open a big opportunity in medical and e-commerce.” He emphasized that Matternet’s systems can be flown with the push of a button, and are authorized to fly “beyond the line of sight,” in Switzerland.
Delivery drone competitors such as Zipline or Flirtey build unmanned aerial vehicles and will fly them on behalf of their clients. Matternet, instead, aims to sell its technology to logistics providers.
The Matternet M2 drones that attained clearance in Switzerland have a maximum range of 20 kilometers or about 12 miles, and can carry a 2 kilogram payload. They fly at an average speed of 36 kilometers or 22 miles per hour. The drones are quadcopters with duplicate sensors and autopilot systems on board. If all on-board electronics fail, the drones release a parachute and land. The drones fly from and land on a base that transmits an infrared signal “to ensure a pinpoint landing,” the company says.
Earlier this month, Swiss Post and Matternet launched a “joint innovation project” with the Ticino-based EOC hospital group to begin testing drone deliveries between a couple of their hospitals in Lugano. Previously, the hospitals transported samples on the road, where traffic would sometimes interfere with urgent testing needs. The option to fly samples between hospitals, without having to commission piloted helicopters or planes, could alleviate delays in testing and therefore patient care.
Medical delivery is not a new idea for drones. In Germany, DHL developed “ parcelcopters ,” to deliver medicine to residents of a remote island in the North Sea called Juist. And in Rwanda, Zipline delivers blood and medical supplies to hospitals and clinics through a program with the government, there.
However, Matternet’s effort with Swiss Post and Ticino EOC hospital group may be the first time that drones are used for medical delivery in a more densely populated market in the developed world.
Swiss Post established their partnership with Matternet two years ago. The companies must still attain a separate safety certification for the packaging that will contain the blood samples, or any other “biohazard” materials, during Matternet drone flights. And they plan to engage in further testing of their drone delivery service before Swiss Post makes the medical drone deliveries an official service.

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Travauxlib takes care of your home renovation for you

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French startup Travauxlib matches you with construction companies so that they can take care of your home. The company raised $1.9 million (€1.8 million)..
French startup Travauxlib matches you with construction companies so that they can take care of your home. The company raised $1.9 million (€1.8 million) from Xavier Niel, Breega Capital and Bpifrance.
Travauxlib usually works on complete home renovation, kitchen remodeling, bathroom work and home extensions. In other words, if you want to change something about your home and it costs anything between €3,000 and €300,000, Travauxlib can help you. On average, clients pay between €15,000 and €20,000.
But the startup doesn’t handle the construction work itself. It’s a marketplace with construction partners paying to work with Travauxlib.
For construction companies, the startup helps you find new clients by showcasing your work on its website. You can generate a quote using Travauxlib and bill your clients directly on the platform. It’s a big time saver as you don’t have to take care of all the paperwork. Finally, Travauxlib tries to work with photographers to take photos of your work.
There are more than a thousand companies on Travauxlib working with the startup’s clients. The selection process is quite tough as the startup only keeps the most competent construction companies.
Right now, Travauxlib is only available in Paris and around Paris, but the company is thinking about opening new markets.
While home renovation doesn’t sound as sexy as many startups out there, it’s been neglected for too long. It’s a very fragmented market and you never know how to find the best company for your home.
Travauxlib adds both more transparency and a technology layer to speed up everything before and after the home renovation process. This could be enough to create a good revenue stream.

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We need a New Deal to address the economic risks of automation

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Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has a surprisingly naive take on the issue of AI and robots replacing human jobs. Mnuchin, who said earlier, that human..
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has a surprisingly naive take on the issue of AI and robots replacing human jobs.
Mnuchin, who said earlier, that human obsolescence is “not even on our radar screen…50–100 more years away” — and that he’s “not worried at all.” For those of us in the tech industry, it’s clear his timescale is inaccurate and that, if the government is complacent about AI, the country is setting itself up for an economic shock.
There’s been downward pressure on jobs since the Industrial Revolution due to leaps in productivity brought about by human ingenuity and lucky discoveries. This has accelerated since the ’80s with the mass adoption of computers, but the market has more or less kept up, creating new openings to fill the eradicated ones, albeit not in the same places (coastal cities have gained, Rust Belt areas have lost out).
However, we have a tsunami on the horizon: automation using AI. It will place intense downward pressure on employment, and threatens to catch a generation (really, three generations) off guard, with unemployment levels higher than the Great Depression.
The automation tsunami
Automation is going to leave millions of Americans un- or under-employed not in “50 to 100 more years,” but within the next decade. As someone very familiar with one of the most-affected sectors, the customer service industry — I invented web chat technology for customer service in the late 1990s, and have been in the space for over 20 years — I can already see the change happening, and the robots appearing, today.
From our data on large banks, telcos, retailers and so on, we can see that approximately 40-50% of tasks performed in customer care fall into a category that is highly susceptible to automation: routine processes like updating payment cards, addresses, passwords and other basic processes. Over 3 million people in the US alone are employed in call centers, and it’s clear to me that the Fourth Industrial Revolution will displace a substantial number of US workers in a far shorter time period than what Mnuchin is positing.
A new New Deal
We need a new New Deal to tackle the consequences of automation. It should be big, aggressive, and, unlike the first one under FDR, it should be preemptive. Without some kind of counterbalancing action, we’ll see tens of millions of workers stranded, with curtailed employment prospects. This will kick off a hereditary shockwave of economic hardship that could be felt for generations.
We know the jobs that will be affected first, in addition to the 3+ million customer care agents I mentioned above, and they are very common ones that employ large swathes of the population: truck and taxi drivers, cashiers, security guards, retail clerks, and a number of others. These people, who will suffer the most, are also the least aware of new advancements in AI and automation (in fact, they are the least likely to be tech savvy at all). Not only this, but they are highly likely to be in lower income brackets without the luxury of time to re-train, while holding down their current job(s), and without the savings to invest in re-education.
More alarming still, our own research show that 88% of Americans reported not being worried about losing their jobs even after being shown research from Oxford University predicting that 47% of US jobs are vulnerable to automation. So we have potentially millions of unemployed Americans on our hands in the next two decades, with very few of them currently doing anything to prepare for a new occupation.
What’s the answer?
A number of people in tech have begun to offer solutions to the looming automation tsunami. Bill Gates suggested we tax the robots in order to slow the progress of automation and re-direct money toward human-service jobs which require a level of empathy and compassion that artificial intelligence cannot yet offer. Massachusetts also floated an idea of taxing self-driving cars.
The problem with taxation is that it is a deterrent to deploying the technology and reaping the productivity gains, while only indirectly helping those who are sidelined by it. It could also be a nightmare to measure, and actually collect that tax.
Others, like Elon Musk, have suggested that a universal basic income is our best way forward to ensure even those who are left with no options for employment are still able to reasonably take care of themselves. Y Combinator also ran a basic income experiment in Oakland.
I’m skeptical of this approach too, although it’s certainly true that social safety nets will need to be strengthened in the face of the shift to automation. UBI reduces the incentive to work, and risks stranding millions of people in a subsistence living trap, able to just about get by, but cut off from the opportunity for upward mobility, as this essay details well.
People and platforms
The first step should be to build up flood defenses against the tsunami. We already know which industries are most vulnerable. Focusing on those, the new New Deal should fund education and retraining programs that provide an opportunity for at-risk employees to learn new skills, geared toward those industries that will be around longer-term. The government could partner with major employers to advertise these training and education programs, and make sure staff are aware of them, as the number of open positions at those employers declines due to automation.
While initiatives like this almost always tend to over- or under-shoot, it will at least soften the pain of impact. Think of it as a stimulus program that incentivizes those individuals in need of job retraining and those organizations that proactively create new jobs. Past programs like Roosevelt’s New Deal and 2009’s ARRA mitigated the worst of the impact of economic turbulence.
My second suggestion is an area where technologists can help. Create software platforms that rely upon human input and labor in areas where AI is less applicable: things like creativity, empathy, and other uniquely human capabilities. Government could help with this. For example, it could offer co-investment to startups or companies that create platforms that use human labor to do uniquely human activities. (Usually, government investment in tech goes poorly, and inflates bubbles, but in this case, a “pre-bubble” that anticipates the great automation shift would actually soften the landing).
We have seen that mass-production in industry has led to a re-evaluation of pre-industrial techniques — artisanal goods, a la Etsy, grew in prominence and value — as people start to cherish the idiosyncratic and the hand-made. The same goes for agriculture, where organic farming and even home farming ( in Brooklyn!) made a comeback, as an alternative to mass-scale industrial farming. In both cases, tech platforms have helped make those older forms of production economically realistic, by reducing distribution and access costs, even though the base cost of goods was higher.
I believe we will need platforms that take advantage of the glut of human labor that the great automation shift will create, and, specifically, we will need platforms that focus on tasks where AI has trouble, and where humans have the upper hand, such as design, creativity, empathy and judgment. Instead of sticking its head in the sand and pretending everything is fine, the government and Steven Mnuchin should focus in more detail on the disruption that’s about to happen, and build a plan to address it.

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