Contact Jean-Pierre Petit

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En résumé (grâce à un LLM libre auto-hébergé)

  • Jean-Pierre Petit receives many emails every day and has trouble answering them all.
  • He asks readers to be concise, to cite sources and to translate the information into French.
  • He values readers' contributions, but highlights the difficulties of managing information.

Contact Jean-Pierre Petit

Contact

March 10, 2005:

I would like to thank my readers for sending me often very interesting information, which I try to handle as best as I can. I spend a lot of hours on it every day. But these emails are piling up at an amazing speed. Do not be surprised if, sometimes, I don't even answer, even briefly. How can I deal with 150 emails a day, a significant number of which contain important information that must be "processed".

In particular, I am unable, due to lack of time, to respond to a message like "go see this site, there are interesting things". You need to be concise. Imagine that I receive a daily deluge of things like this. Get to the point. Paste the key parts of your message. Don't forget to cite the sources, whether it's a text or a photo. If the texts are in English, translate them for me. I could not possibly spend time doing it myself.

Readers often ask me "how can I be useful?" This is it.

It took me 11 years to build this site, whose audience has slowly grown. Access is free and will remain so. It is in a way your newspaper because, in large part, I compose and edit it with the elements you send me. If you accept to be cited, I do. Don't forget to specify it. Not all my informants want to be cited.

The hoaxbusters do an excellent job tracking disinformation operations, which then turn ... against their authors.

I try, alone, to put online information, to raise questions that interest the future of all. I try, as much as possible, to provide real information, with the means I have, while trying to uncover what appears to me as disinformation operations. Sometimes, for example, with the video about the implantation of subcutaneous chips, I manage to put online what can be considered as real information.

Informing, denouncing lies, is all we have left, but it is not nothing.

Thank you all.

P.S: When you send me documentation or when you report something interesting,

let me know if you accept, wish or do not wish to be cited.

I can put indifferently:

- A reader reports that ...

or:

- Reported by Jacques Tartempion, electronic engineer ...

It is up to the reader to decide. I often waste time seeking this authorization for citation.

Do not send me "go to this site, it's interesting".

I read English, but it's tiring. Make sure I don't have to think to find the file. Make a copy in your email. If it's in English, make a summary in French of a few lines. If it's important, I will ask you for help with the translation.

I receive 200 emails a day. I have at least 4 to 5 hours of work to process what my readers send me. Every day there is something that requires a reaction from me and a posting on the site. Please, don't bombard me with humorous drawings like Almanach Vermot, or jokes of this kind. It makes me lose time. Make short messages. Don't expose your impressions on email pages.

We are living the years of all dangers. There are priorities in information. Check if what you send is really interesting. Anyway, even if it is interesting, I can't humanly process everything that is sent to me every day. If the file you sent or reported does not seem to have caught my attention, it is because I was forced to make choices or I put it on hold. I have dozens of interesting files on hold, in this way (sometimes I despair of finding the time to manage them).

Jean-Pierre Petit ---

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