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Jean-Baptiste Soufron, born 6 April 1978 at Bordeaux, France, is a Lawyer, a journalist and teaches at Sciences-Po Paris. He is the former General Secretary of the French National Digital Council. == Career == Soufron is a lawyer and a journalist, who graduated from La Sorbonne. He translated ''The Future of Ideas'', a book by Lawrence Lessig into French. He has been a consultant for free software and open source companies in 2006.〔(« Building a New IP Marketplace » ), Jean-Baptiste Soufron, IBM GIO 2.0, septembre 2006, page 2.〕 He was involved in Wikipedia at the beginning of the project, helping with legal matters before becoming Lead Legal Coordinator〔Election in 2005〕 and then Chief Legal Officer of the Wikimedia Foundation〔(Wikimedia Foundation Resolutions )〕 (2006-2008). In 2010, Soufron was director of the think tank of Cap Digital.〔 (Jean-Baptiste Soufron, Directeur du programme Think Digital )〕 Furthermore, he has been writing on open innovation and digital culture in Esprit,〔()〕 on Internet politics in Dissent 〔()〕 He founded several startups such as Amusement Magazine〔 (Abdel Bounane et Jean-Baptiste Soufron lancent le premier magazine haut de gamme dédié aux jeux vidéos. )〕 and the review website ''nonfiction.fr''.〔(nonfiction.fr )〕 As a journalist,〔(description of Jean-Baptiste Soufron on France Culture website )〕 he co-hosted the live shows Minuit/Dix and Le Rendez-Vous on France Culture. In 2012, he worked along with Fleur Pellerin, an advisor of candidate François Hollande, on the digital economy. After the election of Hollande as President of France and the nomination of Fleur Pellerin as Deputy Minister of Small & Medium-Sized Businesses and Digital Economy, he became senior advisor on digital economy to Fleur Pellerin and then General Secretary of Conseil national du numérique. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Jean-Baptiste Soufron」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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