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Floods, the sanitary pass and Pegasus in the headlines of Twitter

The social media monitoring platform, Visibrain, unveils the top 3 news that have the most buzzed this week on Twitter.

The most commented on Twitter this week was about flooding in Europe. The article published on the francetvinfo site. fr, titled “Floods in Europe: how global warming has gone from ‘threat to future generations’ to imminent danger”, has been shared 18,729 times. This alarming finding did not fail to appeal to Internet users, making the article the most shared content of the week on Twitter. The latter accuse the previous generations of having “denied the reality of the problem for several generations”. “At the same time, it’s been 40 years that it talks about future generations, we are there”, can we read among the most relayed reactions. Other Internet users, like the environmental deputy Danièle Obono, call for a rapid change of course: “Quick, the ecological bifurcation”, she tweeted. The second most buzzed news this week concerned the National Assembly. The article published on the lopinion.fr site, called “The health pass soon to be compulsory for the National Assembly?” has been shared 13,039 times on the social network. About fifty members of the majority tabled an amendment for the health pass to apply within the walls of the Palais Bourbon. However, the President of the National Assembly, Richard Ferrand, is against it. For Internet users, it does not pass. “For Richard Ferrand, the health pass at the National Assembly would be an obstacle to the work of deputies. But at the same time, it does not pose any problem for him to hamper the work of all those who will be made redundant for lack of a pass ”figure among the most shared messages. Finally, the 3rd most buzzed news on Twitter this week was about Pegasus. The article published on the Lemonde website. en, titled “’Project Pegasus’: Revelations on a Global Phone Spy System”, has been shared 7,632 times. On Twitter, Internet users are outraged by this mass espionage, described as “of unprecedented gravity since the Snowden affair”. “Scandal”, “questioning of human rights”, “extreme gravity” are among the expressions most used to reflect on the article.

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