What does October 4 say?

This Friday, October 4, release of the book by Clémentine Vergnaud who died of cancer at 31, testimony from a Franco-Lebanese who managed to return to France and associations are asking social networks to act against sexist and misogynistic content created by artificial intelligence.

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Journalist Clémentine Lecalot-Vergnaud, died of cancer at age 31, June 26, 2023. (ARNAUD DUMONTIER / MAXPPP)

“Hi it’s Leo, what does it say?”

This Friday, October 4, Radio France and Seuil editions are publishing the book by our colleague Clémentine Vergnaud, who died of cancer in December 2023, at the age of 31. In “My life facing cancer”, taken from her podcast, Clémentine talks about her life in the hospital which changed the way caregivers view patients.

READ ALSO: “It’s a precious testimony”: how Clémentine Vergnaud changed the outlook of caregivers

Hundreds of French people were able to leave Lebanon and take a plane for Paris on Thursday, sometimes reluctantly. One of them testifies in this episode to “the chance to live” in France, “a safe country”. During the night from Thursday to Friday, Israel carried out new airstrikes on Hezbollah positions.

And then, 25 associations are asking Facebook, Insta, X, Youtube, TikTok, Snap and Reddit to take real action against porn deepfakes, created by artificial intelligence. The American feminist organization UltraViolet is calling in particular for the implementation of a detection tool for this content which, for example, affected American presidential candidate Kamala Harris.

“What does it say?”, a podcast to listen to from Monday to Friday from 8:30 a.m. on franceinfo.fr, on the franceinfo WhatsApp channel, on TikTok or on all podcast platforms:

A particular desire, a piece of news that questions you or made you react? Introduce yourself and send a voicemail to “What does it say” to participate in a future episode: “Hi Léo, hi Sarah!”


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