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  • List of compatible distributions

    26 avril 2011, par

    The table below is the list of Linux distributions compatible with the automated installation script of MediaSPIP. Distribution nameVersion nameVersion number Debian Squeeze 6.x.x Debian Weezy 7.x.x Debian Jessie 8.x.x Ubuntu The Precise Pangolin 12.04 LTS Ubuntu The Trusty Tahr 14.04
    If you want to help us improve this list, you can provide us access to a machine whose distribution is not mentioned above or send the necessary fixes to add (...)

  • ANNEXE : Les plugins utilisés spécifiquement pour la ferme

    5 mars 2010, par

    Le site central/maître de la ferme a besoin d’utiliser plusieurs plugins supplémentaires vis à vis des canaux pour son bon fonctionnement. le plugin Gestion de la mutualisation ; le plugin inscription3 pour gérer les inscriptions et les demandes de création d’instance de mutualisation dès l’inscription des utilisateurs ; le plugin verifier qui fournit une API de vérification des champs (utilisé par inscription3) ; le plugin champs extras v2 nécessité par inscription3 (...)

  • Submit enhancements and plugins

    13 avril 2011

    If you have developed a new extension to add one or more useful features to MediaSPIP, let us know and its integration into the core MedisSPIP functionality will be considered.
    You can use the development discussion list to request for help with creating a plugin. As MediaSPIP is based on SPIP - or you can use the SPIP discussion list SPIP-Zone.

Sur d’autres sites (7339)

  • France rules Google Analytics non-compliant with GDPR

    11 février 2022, par Erin — Privacy

    Breaking news : The French Data Protection Agency, CNIL (Commission nationale de l’informatique et des libertés), has concluded that the use of Google Analytics is illegal under GDPR. The CNIL has begun issuing formal notices to website managers using Google Analytics.

    This follows the January 2022 Austrian Data Protection Authority’s decision to declare Google Analytics illegal to use under GDPR.

    Google Analytics GDPR breaches continue to spread through the EU

    Since the invalidation of the Privacy Shield framework, an agreement between the EU and US that allowed the transfer of data to certified US companies, the CNIL and other EU data protection authorities have received numerous complaints regarding data transfers collected during visits to websites using Google Analytics.

    "It’s interesting to see that the different European Data Protection Authorities all come to the same conclusion : the use of Google Analytics is illegal. There is a European task force and we assume that this action is coordinated and other authorities will decide similarly."

    Max Schrems, European privacy law activist and honorary chair of noyb.eu

    About the CNIL’s decision

    In this model case, the CNIL has found that an unnamed website’s use of Google Analytics is non-compliant with GDPR because it had breached Article 44 which prohibits the transfer of personal data beyond the EU, unless the recipient country can prove adequate data protection. 

    Under the GDPR, personal data covers a range of identifiers including email address, race, gender, phone number to name a few, but the less obvious identifiers include IP addresses or cookie IDs, for instance. 

    The CNIL’s decision was based on the fact that the US does not meet GDPR sufficient levels of data protection as a result of US surveillance laws. Therefore, the unnamed website’s use of Google Analytics created risks for their website visitors when their personal data was exported to the US. 

    At the time of writing, it is unknown if the CNIL has issued a fine for the GDPR breach. However, the website manager of the unnamed website has been ordered by the CNIL to comply with the GDPR and, if necessary, stop using Google Analytics under the current conditions.

    "One thing we’re certain of is that these decisions will continue to roll out throughout the EU and potentially beyond.

    Other countries are imposing their own privacy regulations that closely mirror the GDPR like Brazil’s General Data Protection Law (LGPD), India’s Data Protection Bill, New Zealand’s Privacy Act and Canada’s Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA) to name a few.”

    Matthieu Aubry, CEO and co-founder of Matomo

    The CNIL offers an evaluation programme to help website managers determine whether web analytics solutions are exempt from collecting data prior to users’ agreement to opt-in through consent screens. Matomo, for instance, is a leading Google Analytics alternative that has been recommended by CNIL and is exempt from tracking consent

    Google Analytics alternative - Twitter
    five5stardesign via Twitter

    English translation : “This is why I anticipated this announcement, gradually moving the analytics of my sites to @matomo_org since several weeks !

    “The @CNIL believes that the use of @googleanalytics is a violation of #GDPR”

    Immediate action required for Google Analytics users

    The CNIL and other EU-based data protection authorities have made their stance on Google Analytics clear and inaction will likely result in fines, which under the GDPR, can be up to €20 million or 4% of the organisation’s global turnover – whichever is higher.

    Based on the CNIL’s formal notice to the model case’s website manager, Google Analytics users should take immediate action to remove any chances of personal data being transferred to the US or find a Google Analytics alternative that is GDPR compliant. 

    CNIL Google Analytics Breach - Twitter
    Virginie Debuisson via Twitter

    English translation : “The CNIL considers that the use of Google Analytics is a violation of the GDPR. I use @matomo_org and I welcome it *winking face* It will squeal tires among growthackers who are slaughtering. Opportunity to look at alternative tools”

    Ready to begin your journey to GDPR compliance with Matomo ? Start your 21-day free trial now (no credit card required) and take advantage of our Google Analytics importer so you don’t lose any of your historical data. 

    What does this mean for Matomo users ?

    As the GDPR continues to evolve, our users can rest assured that Matomo will be at the forefront of these changes. With Matomo Cloud, all data is stored in the EU or in your country of choice when you self-host on your own servers with Matomo On-Premise.

    Conclusion

    Google is in the EU’s crosshairs and organisations that continue to use their tools will be the one’s left to clean up the mess – not Google. Now is the time to act. Search for a Google Analytics alternative and close your compliance gaps today. 

    Join over 1 million other websites using Matomo now. Give Matomo a try with a 21-day free trial – no credit card required. 

    We’d like to also bring attention to the privacy-fighting efforts from noyb and Max Schrems, as this should not go unnoticed. noyb is an independent, non-profit organisation that relies on the support of individuals. Support privacy by supporting noyb – donate or become a member now. 

    Contact details for media :

    For quotes or interviews, please email marketing@matomo.org

  • Google Speech - Streaming Request Returns EOF Error

    16 octobre 2017, par Josh

    Using Go, I’m taking a RTMP stream, transcoding it to FLAC (using ffmpeg) and attempting to stream to Google’s Speech API to transcribe the audio. However, I keep getting EOF errors when sending the data. I can’t find any information on this error in the docs so I’m not exactly sure what’s causing it.

    I’m chunking the received data into 3s clips (length isn’t relevant as long as it’s less than the maximum length of a streaming recognition request).

    Here is the core of my code :

    func main() {

       done := make(chan os.Signal)
       received := make(chan []byte)

       go receive(received)
       go transcribe(received)

       signal.Notify(done, os.Interrupt, syscall.SIGTERM)

       select {
       case <-done:
           os.Exit(0)
       }
    }

    func receive(received chan<- []byte) {
       var b bytes.Buffer
       stdout := bufio.NewWriter(&b)

       cmd := exec.Command("ffmpeg", "-i", "rtmp://127.0.0.1:1935/live/key", "-f", "flac", "-ar", "16000", "-")
       cmd.Stdout = stdout

       if err := cmd.Start(); err != nil {
           log.Fatal(err)
       }

       duration, _ := time.ParseDuration("3s")
       ticker := time.NewTicker(duration)

       for {
           select {
           case <-ticker.C:
               stdout.Flush()
               log.Printf("Received %d bytes", b.Len())
               received <- b.Bytes()
               b.Reset()
           }
       }
    }

    func transcribe(received <-chan []byte) {
       ctx := context.TODO()

       client, err := speech.NewClient(ctx)
       if err != nil {
           log.Fatal(err)
       }

       stream, err := client.StreamingRecognize(ctx)
       if err != nil {
           log.Fatal(err)
       }

       // Send the initial configuration message.
       if err = stream.Send(&speechpb.StreamingRecognizeRequest{
           StreamingRequest: &speechpb.StreamingRecognizeRequest_StreamingConfig{
               StreamingConfig: &speechpb.StreamingRecognitionConfig{
                   Config: &speechpb.RecognitionConfig{
                       Encoding:        speechpb.RecognitionConfig_FLAC,
                       LanguageCode:    "en-GB",
                       SampleRateHertz: 16000,
                   },
               },
           },
       }); err != nil {
           log.Fatal(err)
       }

       for {
           select {
           case data := <-received:
               if len(data) > 0 {
                   log.Printf("Sending %d bytes", len(data))
                   if err := stream.Send(&speechpb.StreamingRecognizeRequest{
                       StreamingRequest: &speechpb.StreamingRecognizeRequest_AudioContent{
                           AudioContent: data,
                       },
                   }); err != nil {
                       log.Printf("Could not send audio: %v", err)
                   }
               }
           }
       }
    }

    Running this code gives this output :

    2017/10/09 16:05:00 Received 191704 bytes
    2017/10/09 16:05:00 Saving 191704 bytes
    2017/10/09 16:05:00 Sending 191704 bytes
    2017/10/09 16:05:00 Could not send audio: EOF

    2017/10/09 16:05:03 Received 193192 bytes
    2017/10/09 16:05:03 Saving 193192 bytes
    2017/10/09 16:05:03 Sending 193192 bytes
    2017/10/09 16:05:03 Could not send audio: EOF

    2017/10/09 16:05:06 Received 193188 bytes
    2017/10/09 16:05:06 Saving 193188 bytes
    2017/10/09 16:05:06 Sending 193188 bytes // Notice that this doesn't error

    2017/10/09 16:05:09 Received 191704 bytes
    2017/10/09 16:05:09 Saving 191704 bytes
    2017/10/09 16:05:09 Sending 191704 bytes
    2017/10/09 16:05:09 Could not send audio: EOF

    Notice that not all of the Sends fail.

    Could anyone point me in the right direction here ? Is it something to do with the FLAC headers or something ? I also wonder if maybe resetting the buffer causes some of the data to be dropped (i.e. it’s a non-trivial operation that actually takes some time to complete) and it doesn’t like this missing information ?

    Any help would be really appreciated.

  • Possible bug in latest google chrome (v62) ?

    21 novembre 2017, par Jalal El-Shaer

    The following demo was working perfectly :

    http://jsfiddle.net/r6wz0nz6/2/

    The following is a sample of ’video-preview’ class in action :

    <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v1uyQZNg2vE" target="_blank" class="video-preview" data-frames="100" data-source="http://i.imgur.com/BX0pV4J.jpg">
    </a>

    Now, if you use your mouse to scroll from left-to-right, somehow it is not working (shows thumbnail instead of current image position). This was working perfectly before v62. While, from right-to-left, it works normally.

    Updated Please watch how this looks here : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HvDP-YXJgOk

    Question : How can I overcome this bug/issue ?

    P.S. the demo is based on this blog post (https://www.binpress.com/tutorial/how-to-generate-video-previews-with-ffmpeg/138)

    Update 2
    Interesting, in the following part :

    elm.mousemove(function(e) {
    var left = e.clientX - elm.position().left;
    slider.show().css('left', left -1); // &lt;&lt;---------------------- this line
    img.css('left', -Math.floor((left / width) * frames) * width);

    if I remove the ’-1’ like so :
    slider.show().css('left', left);
    It works from Left-To-Right, but now from Right-To-Left is showing same bug !!

    Proposed Workaround by @A. Wollf
    Change the "mouseout" to "mouseleave" and it seems to fix it : http://jsfiddle.net/r6wz0nz6/388