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On March 19, 2024, the La Boétie Institute organized the third conference within the framework of the Cédric Durand chair. The question of ecological planning in the age of the Anthropocene arises in radically different terms from those of the modernizing planning of the 20th century, both in terms of its objectives and from the point of view of informational means. In terms of objectives, the reversal is almost total. While in the 21st century it was a question of accelerating economic growth, today it is necessary to plan the decrease in the biophysical impact of human activities. In terms of means too, the context has radically changed. While the question of information and its processing was in the last century one of the most serious obstacles to the deployment of ambitious planning, digital techniques and uses offer for the first time the possibility of broad real-time knowledge of the Earth's metabolism in its economic and ecological dimensions. Considerable information resources are now available for planning. They make possible a new age of progress in which better technical mastery would allow us to consciously regain control over a deregulated socio-ecological metabolism. Ecosocialist social and political technology, however, cannot be reduced to control. It must leave room for meaning, offer individuals the autonomy necessary for a desirable life, preserve a diversity of ways of being in the world and refrain from imposing its own technical rhythm on nature. This is the narrow path of a cyberecosocialism: a democratic and tempered rationalism in the service of ecological justice.