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#cnaf — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #cnaf, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Non, les "étrangers" ne représentent pas "42%" des allocataires de la CAF
    factuel.afp.com/doc.afp.com.83

    Thaïs d'Escufon, ancienne porte-parole du groupe d'ultradroite Génération identitaire (dissous en 2021), avance ce fameux pourcentage : "42% des allocataires de la #CAF sont nés à l'étranger. C'est déjà énorme."

    C'est Eric #Zemmour qui l'avait commis en mai 2020 lors d'un débat avec Michel #Onfray sur #CNews.

    Comme vient de l'expliquer la #CNAF à l #'AFP : fin 2022, "toutes prestations confondues" (alloc. familiales, RSA, APL…), "11% [des] 13,5 millions de foyers allocataires sont de nationalité étrangère."

  2. #FRANCE #CNAF #Algorithms #RiskScoring #AlgorithmicDiscrimination: "Fifteen French NGOs are suing the public body that distributes allowances for families, youth, housing, and inclusion (CNAF) at the French state council over the use of a risk-scoring algorithm, which impacts almost half of France's population, according to a Wednesday (16 October) press release.

    This legal action follows the Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU) ruling that decision-making using scoring algorithms that use personal data is unlawful under the EU's data privacy regulation (GDPR).

    The NGOs are calling on the state council to refer the case to the CJEU for a preliminary ruling. The case could take two to five years, depending on how the reference is handled.

    "This algorithm mathematically reflects the discriminations already present in our society. It is neither neutral nor objective," said Marion Ogier, a lawyer at the Human Rights League, at a press conference in Paris on Wednesday.

    Since 2010, the CNAF has been using an algorithm to select recipients for a review of their benefits. These credit checks are focused on cases deemed as 'higher risk' based on the recipient's profile and situation.

    However, a number of local investigations published in December 2023 criticised these checks for not being truly random. Seventy per cent of 128,000 credit checks conducted in 2021 came from scoring algorithms, revealed CNAF in a 2022 report.

    "The CNAF algorithm is just one part of the system. The public pension schemes, health insurance, and employment service all use similar algorithms,” Ogier added."

    euractiv.com/section/tech/news