On ose l'#IA ! 🥳
Avec ClusterIA nous devenons #AmbassadeurIA du plan "Osez l'IA" porté par @ClaraChappaz
🔥 Depuis 2018, ClusterIA contribue à développer un écosystème d’entreprises et de startups en #IA qui développent des IA #éthique, #responsable et #souveraine
Merci @LareyreRaffort pour cet échange constructif pour le futur de notre territoire. Vous pouvez compter sur le dynamisme de nos startups en IA pour accompagner le territoire vers une transformation réussie. Hâte de la suite
Échange passionnant avec Isabelle Galy, Vice présidente IA Cluster, autour des enjeux de l’#IA pour notre territoire : innovation, formation, attractivité, services publics et écosystème azuréen.
Nice a tous les atouts pour devenir un territoire de référence en intelligence artificielle. 🚀
📣 OBSERVATOIRE DE LA HAINE – DONNÉES GÉNÉRIQUES 📣
14,3 milliards de commentaires analysés en 2025.
Et sur les messages toxiques, voici ce qu'on trouve 👇
👉 47% sont des insultes
👉 14% relèvent de la haine pure
👉 6% sont des propos racistes
👉 3% ciblent la communauté LGBTQIA+
👉 3% relèvent du bodyshaming
Presque 1 message toxique sur 2 est une insulte directe.
"Idiots", "Racaille", ect… C'est le quotidien des conversations en ligne.
Et ça ne reste pas isolé.
Ces messages dégradent l'engagement, font fuir les communautés et impactent directement votre image de marque.
📊 Découvrez tous les insights dans notre Baromètre de la haine 2026.
👉 Téléchargez-le gratuitement en commentaire. 👇
L’institut 3IA Côte d’Azur @Univ_CotedAzur ouvre des opportunités pour doctorants et postdocs en intelligence artificielle (santé, systèmes intelligents, fondamentaux de l’IA) au cœur d’un écosystème de recherche de premier plan. Call #2 : candidatures jusqu’au 22 mai ; Call #3 : candidatures jusqu’au 18 septembre. À vos candidatures ! https://t.co/1zJR8fnwf5 #IA #PhD #Postdoc #quonseledise
La startup Himydata, incubée à Alpha Sophia Antipolis, lance sa nouvelle plateforme IA
Objectif : simplifier l’exploitation des données et déployer des usages IA concrets, sans complexité
🔗 https://t.co/HqC6TctazL
#SophiaAntipolis#IA#Startup
We didn't build another data centre company.
We built the world's first full-stack neo-cloud.
Distributed. Sovereign. Responsible.
@Hivenet + @Policloud + @DataFactory = Antimatter ⚛️
A thread 🧵
Because we get asked a lot.
The Technological Republic, in brief.
1. Silicon Valley owes a moral debt to the country that made its rise possible. The engineering elite of Silicon Valley has an affirmative obligation to participate in the defense of the nation.
2. We must rebel against the tyranny of the apps. Is the iPhone our greatest creative if not crowning achievement as a civilization? The object has changed our lives, but it may also now be limiting and constraining our sense of the possible.
3. Free email is not enough. The decadence of a culture or civilization, and indeed its ruling class, will be forgiven only if that culture is capable of delivering economic growth and security for the public.
4. The limits of soft power, of soaring rhetoric alone, have been exposed. The ability of free and democratic societies to prevail requires something more than moral appeal. It requires hard power, and hard power in this century will be built on software.
5. The question is not whether A.I. weapons will be built; it is who will build them and for what purpose. Our adversaries will not pause to indulge in theatrical debates about the merits of developing technologies with critical military and national security applications. They will proceed.
6. National service should be a universal duty. We should, as a society, seriously consider moving away from an all-volunteer force and only fight the next war if everyone shares in the risk and the cost.
7. If a U.S. Marine asks for a better rifle, we should build it; and the same goes for software. We should as a country be capable of continuing a debate about the appropriateness of military action abroad while remaining unflinching in our commitment to those we have asked to step into harm’s way.
8. Public servants need not be our priests. Any business that compensated its employees in the way that the federal government compensates public servants would struggle to survive.
9. We should show far more grace towards those who have subjected themselves to public life. The eradication of any space for forgiveness—a jettisoning of any tolerance for the complexities and contradictions of the human psyche—may leave us with a cast of characters at the helm we will grow to regret.
10. The psychologization of modern politics is leading us astray. Those who look to the political arena to nourish their soul and sense of self, who rely too heavily on their internal life finding expression in people they may never meet, will be left disappointed.
11. Our society has grown too eager to hasten, and is often gleeful at, the demise of its enemies. The vanquishing of an opponent is a moment to pause, not rejoice.
12. The atomic age is ending. One age of deterrence, the atomic age, is ending, and a new era of deterrence built on A.I. is set to begin.
13. No other country in the history of the world has advanced progressive values more than this one. The United States is far from perfect. But it is easy to forget how much more opportunity exists in this country for those who are not hereditary elites than in any other nation on the planet.
14. American power has made possible an extraordinarily long peace. Too many have forgotten or perhaps take for granted that nearly a century of some version of peace has prevailed in the world without a great power military conflict. At least three generations — billions of people and their children and now grandchildren — have never known a world war.
15. The postwar neutering of Germany and Japan must be undone. The defanging of Germany was an overcorrection for which Europe is now paying a heavy price. A similar and highly theatrical commitment to Japanese pacifism will, if maintained, also threaten to shift the balance of power in Asia.
16. We should applaud those who attempt to build where the market has failed to act. The culture almost snickers at Musk’s interest in grand narrative, as if billionaires ought to simply stay in their lane of enriching themselves . . . . Any curiosity or genuine interest in the value of what he has created is essentially dismissed, or perhaps lurks from beneath a thinly veiled scorn.
17. Silicon Valley must play a role in addressing violent crime. Many politicians across the United States have essentially shrugged when it comes to violent crime, abandoning any serious efforts to address the problem or take on any risk with their constituencies or donors in coming up with solutions and experiments in what should be a desperate bid to save lives.
18. The ruthless exposure of the private lives of public figures drives far too much talent away from government service. The public arena—and the shallow and petty assaults against those who dare to do something other than enrich themselves—has become so unforgiving that the republic is left with a significant roster of ineffectual, empty vessels whose ambition one would forgive if there were any genuine belief structure lurking within.
19. The caution in public life that we unwittingly encourage is corrosive. Those who say nothing wrong often say nothing much at all.
20. The pervasive intolerance of religious belief in certain circles must be resisted. The elite’s intolerance of religious belief is perhaps one of the most telling signs that its political project constitutes a less open intellectual movement than many within it would claim.
21. Some cultures have produced vital advances; others remain dysfunctional and regressive. All cultures are now equal. Criticism and value judgments are forbidden. Yet this new dogma glosses over the fact that certain cultures and indeed subcultures . . . have produced wonders. Others have proven middling, and worse, regressive and harmful.
22. We must resist the shallow temptation of a vacant and hollow pluralism. We, in America and more broadly the West, have for the past half century resisted defining national cultures in the name of inclusivity. But inclusion into what?
Excerpts from the #1 New York Times Bestseller The Technological Republic: Hard Power, Soft Belief, and the Future of the West, by Alexander C. Karp & Nicholas W. Zamiska
https://t.co/8igjazz1On
Earlier this year Yann LeCun left Meta because Mark Zuckerberg wouldn't bet the company on JEPA. Last week his group dropped the first JEPA that actually trains end-to-end from raw pixels. 15 million parameters. Single GPU. A few hours.
The timing is not a coincidence.
For four years Meta has been the house that JEPA built. LeCun published the original paper from FAIR in 2022. I-JEPA and V-JEPA came out of his lab. The architecture was supposed to be the escape hatch from LLMs, the path to robots that actually learn physics instead of hallucinating about it. Every version shipped fragile. Stop-gradients. Exponential moving averages. Frozen pretrained encoders. Six or seven loss terms that had to be hand-tuned or the model collapsed into garbage representations.
Meta kept funding LLMs. Llama shipped. Llama scaled. Llama got beat by Qwen and DeepSeek. Zuck spent $14 billion to buy ScaleAI and install Alexandr Wang. The FAIR robotics group was dissolved. LeCun's research kept winning papers and losing the product roadmap.
He left, started AMI Labs, and said publicly that LLMs were a dead end.
Now the paper. LeWorldModel. One regularizer replaces the entire pile of heuristics. Project the latent embeddings onto random directions, run a normality test, penalize deviation from Gaussian. The model cannot collapse because collapsed embeddings fail the test by construction. Hyperparameter search went from O(n^6) polynomial to O(log n) logarithmic. Six tunable knobs became one.
The downstream numbers are what should scare the robotics capex class. 200 times fewer tokens per observation than DINO-WM. Planning time drops from 47 seconds to 0.98 seconds per cycle. 48x faster at matching or beating foundation-model performance on Push-T and 3D cube control. The latent space probes cleanly for agent position, block velocity, end-effector pose. It correctly flags physically impossible events as surprising. It learned physics without being told physics existed.
Figure AI is valued at $39 billion. Tesla Optimus is mass-producing. World Labs raised $230 million to sell generative world models. Everyone in humanoid robotics is burning capital on foundation-model pipelines that plan in 47 seconds per cycle.
LeCun's group just showed you can do it with 15 million parameters on a single GPU in a few hours.
This is the Xerox PARC pattern running again. Meta had the next architecture. Meta had the scientist. Meta dissolved the robotics team, passed on the productization, and watched the exit. Three months later the lab that was supposed to be Meta's publishes the result that resets the robotics cost structure.
The paper is worth more than Alexandr Wang.
La "championne" de la data responsable @Ipepperinfo continue de grandir à @SophiaAntip0lis : la #startup renforce ses équipes et ses capacités pour accompagner les organisations dans une exploitation plus éthique et durable des données, confirmant le positionnement du territoire comme pôle clé de la data responsable et de l’#innovation #umérique https://t.co/MGvlNlsPcp via @Tribuca #FrenchTech #SophiaAntipolis #SophiaStartups
Et si vous passiez à côté de la plus value apportée par l'IA pour le marketing ?
Pour dépasser l'illusion de l'adoption quelques pré requis à retrouver dans cet article!
Smartprofile a lancé son programme de R&D autour de l'IA en 2017 en partenariat avec l'INRIA .. parlons en!
https://t.co/vkJUrE2HA1
Nous étions présents à #SCynergy deux journées au Luxembourg sur l’#IA et le #quantum et l’occasion de découvrir leur infrastructures IA pour les entreprises qui veulent développer des solutions souveraines en Europe .
Des synergies prometteuses pour notre écosystème !
#Scynergy day 2
La stratégie IA du Luxembourg est clairement orientée sur la facilitation de l’entraînement souverain et sécurisé des modèles d’IA en particulier pour les entreprises . Rapidité est le mot clé !
#Scynergy day 2
La stratégie IA du Luxembourg est clairement orientée sur la facilitation de l’entraînement souverain et sécurisé des modèles d’IA en particulier pour les entreprises . Rapidité est le mot clé !
ClusterIA en visite au supercalculateur #MeluXina@LuxProvide pour explorer la puissance du HPC au service de notre écosystème.
L'objectif ? Ouvrir de nouvelles opportunités de calcul pour nos startups et accélérer le déploiement de cas d'usage IA
#IA#HPC#Innovation#Startups