Recherche avancée

Médias (10)

Mot : - Tags -/wav

Autres articles (57)

  • Configurer la prise en compte des langues

    15 novembre 2010, par

    Accéder à la configuration et ajouter des langues prises en compte
    Afin de configurer la prise en compte de nouvelles langues, il est nécessaire de se rendre dans la partie "Administrer" du site.
    De là, dans le menu de navigation, vous pouvez accéder à une partie "Gestion des langues" permettant d’activer la prise en compte de nouvelles langues.
    Chaque nouvelle langue ajoutée reste désactivable tant qu’aucun objet n’est créé dans cette langue. Dans ce cas, elle devient grisée dans la configuration et (...)

  • Contribute to documentation

    13 avril 2011

    Documentation is vital to the development of improved technical capabilities.
    MediaSPIP welcomes documentation by users as well as developers - including : critique of existing features and functions articles contributed by developers, administrators, content producers and editors screenshots to illustrate the above translations of existing documentation into other languages
    To contribute, register to the project users’ mailing (...)

  • Use, discuss, criticize

    13 avril 2011, par

    Talk to people directly involved in MediaSPIP’s development, or to people around you who could use MediaSPIP to share, enhance or develop their creative projects.
    The bigger the community, the more MediaSPIP’s potential will be explored and the faster the software will evolve.
    A discussion list is available for all exchanges between users.

Sur d’autres sites (6760)

  • 4 Ways to Embed User Privacy & Data Security in Your Business

    15 juillet 2022, par Erin — Privacy

    Customer analytics undeniably plays a vital role for businesses. Product improvements, interface personalisation, content improvements, and creative advertising thrive on data. 

    Yet, there’s a fine line between being a customer-centred company and a privacy-violating one. 

    Due to ubiquitous online tracking, 62% of Americans now believe that it’s impossible to go about their daily lives without companies collecting data about them. Still, despite the importance of privacy in business for consumers, companies are reluctant to act. Privacy initiatives often stay on the back burner due to perceived complexity. That’s true to some extent.

    Privacy in business does assume complex technical changes to your data management. But to be a privacy-centred organisation, you also need to re-think your processes, practices, and culture. 

    Here are four ways to start your journey to better user privacy and data security. 

    1. Revise Your Data Collection Process to Gain Consumer Trust 

    The public is wary of sharing data with businesses because they are suspicious of its subsequent usage. 

    However, not all data collection is bad or wrong. In many cases, you need specific data for service delivery, compliance, or good-natured personalisation. 

    That’s exactly what consumers expect. Almost half of US consumers say they’d trust a company that limits the amount of personal information requested and only asks for data relevant to its products/services. 

    By limiting data collection and offering transparent data usage terms, you can : 

    • Reassure reluctant users to try your product or service — hence, boost conversions and sales. 
    • Retain existing audiences by gaining their trust, which leads to loyalty and higher customer lifetime value (CLV). 

    To gain consumers’ trust, implement proper consent and opt-out mechanisms. Then create educational materials about how you are collecting and using their data.

    2. Perform Data Mapping to Determine Where Sensitive Data Rests 

    Businesses are already pressed with an expanded cyber-security radar, courtesy of remote work, digital payment processing, IoT device adoption, etc. Yet, 41% of the executives don’t think their security initiatives have kept up with the digital transformations.

    Loopholes in security eventually result in a data breach. The average cost of a data breach looms at $4.24 million globally. The sum includes regulatory fines and containment costs, plus indirect losses in the form of reduced brand equity and market share. 

    Lax data protection in business also undermines consumer trust : 87% of consumers wouldn’t transact with a company if they had qualms with its security practices. 

    To improve your security posture, analyse where you are storing sensitive consumer data, who has access to it (internally and externally), and how you are protecting it. Then work with cybersecurity specialists on implementing stronger consumer security mechanisms (e.g. auto-log offs, secure password policy, etc) and extra internal security policies (if needed). 

    At the same time, start practising data minimisation. Ensure that all collected data is : 

    • Adequate – sufficient to meet your stated objectives 
    • Relevant – is rationally linked to the objectives 
    • Limited – no unnecessary data is collected or stored
    • Timely – data is periodically reviewed and removed when unnecessary 
    Data Minimisation Principles

    These principles prevent data hoarding. Also, they help improve your security posture and regulatory compliance by reducing the volume of information you need to safeguard.

    3. Do an Inventory of Your Business Tools

    Data leaks and consumer privacy breaches often occur through third parties. Because Google Analytics was deemed in breach of European GDPR in France, Austria and Italy, businesses using it are vulnerable to lawsuits (which are already happening). 

    Investigate your corporate toolkit to determine “weak links” – tools with controversial privacy policies, murky data collection practices, and poor security. 

    Treat it as a journey and pick your battles. By relying on Big Tech products for years, you might have overlooked better alternatives. 

    For example :

    • Matomo is a privacy-centred Google Analytics alternative. Our web analytics is compliant with GDPR, CCPA, and other global privacy laws. Unlike Google Analytics, we don’t exploit any data you collect and provide full transparency into how and where it’s stored. Or if you want a simple analytics solution, Fathom is another great privacy-friendly option.
    Matomo Dashboard
    • For online data storage, you can choose Proton Drive or Nextcloud (open-source). Or host your corporate data with a local cloud hosting provider to avoid cross-border data transfers.
    Proton Drive

    4. Cultivate a Privacy-Centred Corporate Culture 

    To make privacy a competitive advantage, you need every team member (at every level) to respect its importance. 

    This is a continuous process of inspiring and educating your people. Find “privacy ambassadors” who are willing to lead the conversations, educate others, and provide resources for leading the change. 

    On an operational level, incorporate privacy principles around data minimisation, bounded collection, and usage into your Code of Conduct, standard operating procedures (SOPs), and other policies. 

    Creating a privacy-centric culture takes effort, but it pays off well. Cisco estimates that for each dollar spent on privacy, an average organisation gets $2.70 in associated benefits. Almost half (47%) of organisations gain 2X returns on their privacy initiatives.

    Moving Forward with a Data Privacy Programme 

    Privacy has become a strong differentiator for brands. Consumers crave transparency and ethical data usage. Regulators mandate limited data collection and proper security mechanisms.

    But sweeping changes are hard to implement. So start small and go one step at a time. Understand which first-party data your company collects and how it is stored.

    Then look into the tools and technologies you are using for data collection. Do these provide sufficient privacy controls ? How are they using data collected on your behalf ? Finally, move to wider transformations, pertaining to data management, cybersecurity, and cultural practices. 

    Be consistent with your effort — and eventually, all the pieces will fall into place. 

  • Announcing our latest open source project : DeviceDetector

    30 juillet 2014, par Stefan Giehl — Community, Development, Meta, DeviceDetector

    This blog post is an announcement for our latest open source project release : DeviceDetector ! The Universal Device Detection library will parse any User Agent and detect the browser, operating system, device used (desktop, tablet, mobile, tv, cars, console, etc.), brand and model.

    Read on to learn more about this exciting release.

    Why did we create DeviceDetector ?

    Our previous library UserAgentParser only had the possibility to detect operating systems and browsers. But as more and more traffic is coming from mobile devices like smartphones and tablets it is getting more and more important to know which devices are used by the websites visitors.

    To ensure that the device detection within Piwik will gain the required attention, so it will be as accurate as possible, we decided to move that part of Piwik into a separate project, that we will maintain separately. As an own project we hope the DeviceDetector will gain a better visibility as well as a better support by and for the community !

    DeviceDetector is hosted on GitHub at piwik/device-detector. It is also available as composer package through Packagist.

    How DeviceDetector works

    Every client requesting data from a webserver identifies itself by sending a so-called User-Agent within the request to the server. Those User Agents might contain several information such as :

    • client name and version (clients can be browsers or other software like feed readers, media players, apps,…)
    • operating system name and version
    • device identifier, which can be used to detect the brand and model.

    For Example :

    Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; Android 4.4.2; Nexus 5 Build/KOT49H) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/32.0.1700.99 Mobile Safari/537.36

    This User Agent contains following information :

    Operating system is Android 4.4.2, client uses the browser Chrome Mobile 32.0.1700.99 and the device is a Google Nexus 5 smartphone.

    What DeviceDetector currently detects

    DeviceDetector is able to detect bots, like search engines, feed fetchers, site monitors and so on, five different client types, including around 100 browsers, 15 feed readers, some media players, personal information managers (like mail clients) and mobile apps using the AFNetworking framework, around 80 operating systems and nine different device types (smartphones, tablets, feature phones, consoles, tvs, car browsers, cameras, smart displays and desktop devices) from over 180 brands.

    Note : Piwik itself currently does not use the full feature set of DeviceDetector. Client detection is currently not implemented in Piwik (only detected browsers are reported, other clients are marked as Unknown). Client detection will be implemented into Piwik in the future, follow #5413 to stay updated.

    Performance of DeviceDetector

    Our detections are currently handled by an enormous number of regexes, that are defined in several .YML Files. As parsing these .YML files is a bit slow, DeviceDetector is able to cache the parsed .YML Files. By default DeviceDetector uses a static cache, which means that everything is cached in static variables. As that only improves speed for many detections within one process, there are also adapters to cache in files or memcache for speeding up detections across requests.

    How can users help contribute to DeviceDetector ?

    Submit your devices that are not detected yet

    If you own a device, that is currently not correctly detected by the DeviceDetector, please create a issue on GitHub
    In order to check if your device is detected correctly by the DeviceDetector go to your Piwik server, click on ‘Settings’ link, then click on ‘Device Detection’ under the Diagnostic menu. If the data does not match, please copy the displayed User Agent and use that and your device data to create a ticket.

    Submit a list of your User Agents

    In order to create new detections or improve the existing ones, it is necessary for us to have lists of User Agents. If you have a website used by mostly non desktop devices it would be useful if you send a list of the User Agents that visited your website. To do so you need access to your access logs. The following command will extract the User Agents :

    zcat ~/path/to/access/logs* | awk -F'"' '{print $6}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -n20000 > /home/piwik/top-user-agents.txt

    If you want to help us with those data, please get in touch at devicedetector@piwik.org

    Submit improvements on GitHub

    As DeviceDetector is free/libre library, we invite you to help us improving the detections as well as the code. Please feel free to create tickets and pull requests on Github.

    What’s the next big thing for DeviceDetector ?

    Please check out the list of issues in device-detector issue tracker.

    We hope the community will answer our call for help. Together, we can build DeviceDetector as the most powerful device detection library !

    Happy Device Detection,

  • Matomo Celebrates 15 Years of Building an Open-Source & Transparent Web Analytics Solution

    30 juin 2022, par Matthieu Aubry — About, Community
    &lt;script type=&quot;text/javascript&quot;&gt;<br />
           if ('function' === typeof window.playMatomoVideo){<br />
           window.playMatomoVideo(&quot;brand&quot;, &quot;#brand&quot;)<br />
           } else {<br />
           document.addEventListener(&quot;DOMContentLoaded&quot;, function() { window.playMatomoVideo(&quot;brand&quot;, &quot;#brand&quot;); });<br />
           }<br />
      &lt;/script&gt;

    Fifteen years ago, I realised that people (myself included) were increasingly integrating the internet into their everyday lives, and it was clear that it would only expand in the future. It was an exciting new world, but the amount of personal data shared online, level of tracking and lack of security was a growing concern. Google Analytics was just launched then and was already gaining huge traction – so data from millions of websites started flowing into Google’s database, creating what was then the biggest centralised database about people worldwide and their actions online.

    So as a young engineering student, I decided we needed to build an open source and transparent solution that could help make the internet more secure and private while still providing organisations with powerful insights. I aimed to create a win-win solution for businesses and their digital consumers.

    And in 2007, I started developing Matomo with the help from Scott Switzer and Jennifer Langdon (who offered me an internship and support).   

    All thanks to the Matomo Community

    We have reached significant milestones and made major changes over the last 15 years, but we wouldn’t be where we are today without the Matomo Community.

    So I would like to celebrate and thank the hundreds of volunteer developers who have donated their time to develop Matomo, the thousands of contributors who provided feedback to improve Matomo, the countless supportive forum members, our passionate team of 40 at Matomo, the numerous translators who have translated Matomo and the 1.5 million websites that choose Matomo as their analytics platform.

    Matomo's Birthday
    Team Meetup in Paris in 2012

    Matomo has been a community effort built on the shoulders of many, and we will continue to work for you. 

    So let’s look at some milestones we have achieved over the last 15 years.

    Looking back on milestones in our timeline

    2007

    • Birth of Matomo
    • First alpha version released

    2008

    • Release first public 0.1.0 version

    2009

    • 50,000 websites use Matomo

    2010

    • Matomo first stable 1.0.0 released
    • Mobile app launched

    2011

    • Released Ecommerce Analytics, Custom Variables, First Party Cookies

    • Released Privacy control features (first of many privacy features to come !)

    2012

    • Released Log Analytics feature
    • 1 Million Downloads !
    • 300,000 websites worldwide use Matomo

    2013

    • Matomo is now available in 50 languages !
    • Matomo brand redesign

    2016

    2017

    • Launched Matomo Cloud service 
    • Released Multi Channel Conversion Attribution Premium Feature, Custom Reports Premium Feature, Login Saml Premium Feature, WooCommerceAnalytics Premium Feature and Heatmap & Session Recording Premium Feature 

    2018

    2019

    2020

    2021

    • 1,000,000 websites worldwide use Matomo
    • including 30,000 active Matomo for WordPress installations
    • Released SEO Web Vitals, Advertising Conversion Export and Tracking Spam Prevention feature

    2022

    • Released WP Statistics to Matomo importer

    Our efforts continue

    While we’ve seen incredible growth over the years, our work doesn’t stop there. In fact, we’re only just getting started.

    Today over 55% of the internet continues to use privacy-threatening web analytics solutions, while 1.5% uses Matomo. So there are still great strides to be made to create a more private internet, and joining the Matomo Community is one way to support this movement.

    There are many ways to get involved too, such as :

    So what comes next for Matomo ?

    The future of Matomo is approachable, powerful and flexible. We’re strengthening the customers’ voice, expanding our resources internally (we’re continuously hiring !) and conducting rigorous customer research to craft a tool that balances usability and functionality.

    I look forward to the next 15 years and seeing what the future holds for Matomo and our community.