At the Ready After Paris Attacks 17 November 2015

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

At the Ready After Paris Attacks 17 November 2015 Facebook 'safety check' at the ready after Paris attacks 17 November 2015 A Facebook tool that let people check whether friends in Paris have not yet checked in as safe. friends were safe after deadly attacks in Paris will be used more widely in the future, the social The IS jihadist group has claimed responsibility for network said. both the Paris and Beirut attacks, which killed 44 people. The announcement came amid criticism that the "Safety Check" feature was not activated for other © 2015 AFP bombings, such as Thursday's blasts in Beirut that rank among the deadliest to hit Lebanon in decades. "Many people have rightfully asked why we turned on Safety Check for Paris but not for bombings in Beirut and other places," Facebook co-founder and chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said in a post over the weekend. "You are right that there are many other important conflicts in the world," he added. "We care about all people equally, and we will work hard to help people suffering in as many of these situations as we can." Going forward, Facebook now plans to "activate Safety Check for more human disasters," according to Zuckerberg. Survivors seeking shelter and people worried about friends or families took to social media following a wave of attacks in the French capital late Friday that killed 129 people. Facebook launched a "Paris Terror Attacks" check- in feature to let people signal that they were safe to friends and acquaintances on the social networking site. "Quickly find and connect with friends in the area," a message from the Facebook Safety Check service read. "Mark them safe if you know they're OK." The feature also allows people to check which 1 / 2 APA citation: Facebook 'safety check' at the ready after Paris attacks (2015, November 17) retrieved 27 September 2021 from https://phys.org/news/2015-11-facebook-safety-ready-paris.html This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only. 2 / 2 Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org).
Recommended publications
  • A Comprehensive Analysis and Action Plan on a Social Media Strategy for Disaster Response: Risk Mitigation
    __________________________ A COMPREHENSIVE ANALYSIS AND ACTION PLAN ON A SOCIAL MEDIA STRATEGY FOR DISASTER RESPONSE: RISK MITIGATION Prepared by summer 2017 Masters students at the University of Southern California’s Sol Price School of Public Policy for Italy’s Dipartimento Protezione Civile. __________________________ Acknowledgments This report was written and compiled by Wenjing Dong, Maria de la Luz Garcia, Kalisi Kupu, Leyao Li, Hilary Olson, Xuepan Zeng, and Giovanni Zuniga. We want to thank Dr. Eric Heikkila, Ph.D., for his insight and supervision during this process. We would also like to thank Professors Veronica Vecchi and Raffaella Saporito from the SDA Bocconi School of Management for their coordination efforts and use of their facilities, as well as providing us with educational enrichment and guidance while in Milan, Italy. A final thanks to the Dipartimento Protezione Civile for being available to us and for answering all of our many questions. The Dipartimento Protezione Civile’s support and feedback were greatly appreciated and instrumental in the creation of this report. 1. Table of Contents I. INTRODUCTION AND MOTIVATIONS ............................................................................. 3 CONSIDERATION 1. A PERSON-CENTRIC APPROACH .................................................. 3 CONSIDERATION 2. VULNERABLE SUBGROUPS ........................................................... 4 CONSIDERATION 3. DATA NEEDS ..................................................................................... 5 II. MOVING
    [Show full text]
  • A Study of the Diffusion of Innovations and Hurricane Response Communication in the U.S
    Old Dominion University ODU Digital Commons Communication & Theatre Arts Theses Communication & Theatre Arts Summer 2019 A Study of the Diffusion of Innovations and Hurricane Response Communication in the U.S. Coast Guard Melissa L. Leake Old Dominion University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/communication_etds Part of the Mass Communication Commons, and the Military and Veterans Studies Commons Recommended Citation Leake, Melissa L.. "A Study of the Diffusion of Innovations and Hurricane Response Communication in the U.S. Coast Guard" (2019). Master of Arts (MA), Thesis, Communication & Theatre Arts, Old Dominion University, DOI: 10.25777/cqhe-xy91 https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/communication_etds/8 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Communication & Theatre Arts at ODU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Communication & Theatre Arts Theses by an authorized administrator of ODU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A STUDY OF THE DIFFUSION OF INNOVATIONS AND HURRICANE-RESPONSE COMMUNICATION IN THE U. S. COAST GUARD by Melissa L. Leake B.A. May 2018, Pennsylvania State University A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of Old Dominion University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS LIFESPAN & DIGITAL COMMUNICATION OLD DOMINION UNIVERSITY August 2019 Approved by: Thomas Socha (Director) Brenden O’Hallarn (Member) Katherine Hawkins (Member) ABSTRACT A STUDY OF THE DIFFUSION OF INNOVATIONS AND HURRICANE-RESPONSE COMMUNICATION IN THE U. S. COAST GUARD Melissa L. Leake Old Dominion University, 2019 Director: Dr. Thomas Socha Hurricane Harvey (HH) is considered to be the first natural disaster where social-network applications to request help surpassed already overloaded 911 systems (Seetharaman & Wells, 2017).
    [Show full text]
  • IEEE 2015 Global Humanitarian Technology Conference (GHTC)
    Using Open-source Hardware to Support Disadvantaged Communications Andrew Weinert, Hongyi Hu, Chad Spensky, and Benjamin Bullough MIT Lincoln Laboratory 244 Wood Street Lexington, MA 02420-9108 {andrew.weinert,hongyi.hu,chad.spensky,ben.bullough}@ll.mit.edu Abstract—During a disaster, conventional communications have transformed response [2]. However, there is frequently infrastructures are often compromised, which prevents local a disconnect between the realities the information systems populations from contacting family, friends, and colleagues. The at the affected location and those in the ubiquitous cloud. lack of communication also impedes responder efforts to gather, Internet enabled web technologies such as crowdsourcing [3] organize, and disseminate information. This problem is made and social media [4] have helped facilitate interaction across worse by the unique cost and operational constraints typically these actors, but fail when communications at the affected associated with the humanitarian assistance and disaster relief (HADR) space. In response, we present a low-cost, scalable system region are either degraded or nonexistent due to either natural that creates a wide-area, best-effort, ad-hoc wireless network for or human actions. For example, an estimated three million emergency information. The Communication Assistance Technol- people were without cellular service immediately following ogy over Ad-Hoc Networks (CATAN) system embraces the maker the Haiti Earthquake (2010) [5]. Similarly, cellphone networks and do it yourself (DIY) communities by leveraging open-source were overwhelmed in the moments after the 2013 Boston and hobbyist technologies to create cheap, lightweight, battery- Marathon bombings [6]. This effectively disconnects the peo- powered nodes that can be deployed quickly for a variety of ple in the affected region from the rest of the world (e.g., their operations.
    [Show full text]
  • Reality Is Broken a Why Games Make Us Better and How They Can Change the World E JANE Mcgonigal
    Reality Is Broken a Why Games Make Us Better and How They Can Change the World E JANE McGONIGAL THE PENGUIN PRESS New York 2011 ADVANCE PRAISE FOR Reality Is Broken “Forget everything you know, or think you know, about online gaming. Like a blast of fresh air, Reality Is Broken blows away the tired stereotypes and reminds us that the human instinct to play can be harnessed for the greater good. With a stirring blend of energy, wisdom, and idealism, Jane McGonigal shows us how to start saving the world one game at a time.” —Carl Honoré, author of In Praise of Slowness and Under Pressure “Reality Is Broken is the most eye-opening book I read this year. With awe-inspiring ex­ pertise, clarity of thought, and engrossing writing style, Jane McGonigal cleanly exploded every misconception I’ve ever had about games and gaming. If you thought that games are for kids, that games are squandered time, or that games are dangerously isolating, addictive, unproductive, and escapist, you are in for a giant surprise!” —Sonja Lyubomirsky, Ph.D., professor of psychology at the University of California, Riverside, and author of The How of Happiness: A Scientific Approach to Getting the Life You Want “Reality Is Broken will both stimulate your brain and stir your soul. Once you read this remarkable book, you’ll never look at games—or yourself—quite the same way.” —Daniel H. Pink, author of Drive and A Whole New Mind “The path to becoming happier, improving your business, and saving the world might be one and the same: understanding how the world’s best games work.
    [Show full text]
  • Asia-Pacific Issue Paper on Social Media
    ___________________________________________________________________________ 2017/TEL56/DSG/009 Agenda Item: 3.2.2 Asia-Pacific Issue Paper on Social Media Purpose: Information Submitted by: ISOC ICT Development Steering Group Meeting Bangkok, Thailand 14 December 2017 Issue Paper: Asia-Pacific Bureau Social Media November 2017 The Issues Social media is a key driver for people to go online, but there is a huge disparity in its use among Asia-Pacific countries, from a 5% penetration in Papua New Guinea to 82% in the Republic of Korea (see Figure 1) Studies have shown that social media is a Figure 1. Social media penetration rates in the Asia-Pacific region key driver for people to go online.1 It is one of the top activities on the Internet, particularly in developing countries, and is often people's first experience with the Internet.2 These platforms have surged in popularity, in parallel with the growth of mobile technology and tend to be optimised for mobile use. Social media sites have mainly been used for communication, but they are also creating new business models and incorporating multiple services (e.g., shopping, e-payment and banking, and 3 arranging transportation). Source: We Are Social, "Digital in APAC 2016," 5 September 2016 For governments, these platforms provide an opportunity to better engage with citizens: 77% of national government portals in the Asia-Pacific region have social media networking tools.4 Businesses, entrepreneurs and others are using them for marketing and branding, selling their products and services, and customer service and feedback. 1 GSMA, "Accelerating Digital Literacy: Empowering Women to Use the Mobile Internet," 2015, http://www.gsma.com/mobilefordevelopment/wp- content/uploads/2015/06/DigitalLiteracy_v6_WEB_Singles.pdf; and World Economic Forum, "The Impact of Digital Content: Opportunities and Risks of Creating and Sharing Information Online," January 2016.
    [Show full text]
  • Social Media Crisis Communication During Hurricane Matthew
    JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL CRISIS AND RISK Nicholson School of COMMUNICATION RESEARCH Communication and Media 2018, VOL. 1, NO 2, 279302 University of Central Florida https://doi.org/10.30658/jicrcr.1.2.5 www.jicrcr.com Revisiting STREMII: Social Media Crisis Communication During Hurricane Matthew Margaret C. Stewart a and Cory Youngb aDepartment of Communication, University of North Florida, Jacksonville, Florida, USA; bDepartment of Strategic Communication, Ithaca College, Ithaca, New York, USA ABSTRACT Social media platforms in uence the ow of information and technologically mediated com- munication during a storm. In 2015, Stewart and Wilson introduced the STREMII (pronounced STREAM-ee) as a six-phase model for social media crisis communication in an e ort to assist institutions and organizations during unanticipated events, using the crisis of Hurricane Sandy as an applied example. Since the inception of the model, several advancements in social media strategy have revealed the opportunity for further development. This current work presents a revision of the original model, emphasizing the need for ongoing social listening and engage- ment with target audiences. These aspects of the revised model are discussed in interpersonal and organizational contexts related to examples of social media use during the October 2016 Atlantic Hurricane Matthew. KEYWORDS: Social media; crisis management; situational crisis communication theory; STREMII model; Hurricane Matthew The events of Hurricane Matthew in October 2016 resulted in a dev- astating crisis which was fully depicted via social media to engaged audiences. This hurricane event occurred during a time of innovative developments among several social media outlets, including Facebook Live, safe check-ins, and SnapChat stories.
    [Show full text]
  • From UX to CX: Rethinking the Digital User Experience As a Collaborative Exchange
    From UX to CX: Rethinking the Digital User Experience as a Collaborative Exchange May 2017 Collaborative Exchange / 2016-2017 What makes for a valuable user experience – one where customers extract value and the firm captures profit? Recent A New research has pointed toward technology as the catalyst for structural changes that allow firms to become more open- sourced via digital platforms, creating a competitive advantage. Indeed, platform structures have brought together producers and consumers in high-value exchanges.1 Yet there is still much to learn about how customers determine whether they have received value from these exchanges. It’s rather obvious why a firm would want its customers to solve Prism for their own problems via peer-based support forums, for example (for call-center savings, as in the case of Apple). But why would customers agree to do the firm’s work? What kind of value do they receive in return? In a desire to welcome User Experience a new age of digital technology and prescient algorithms, we must be mindful of ignoring the human element in the user experience. Firms that successfully create win-win dynamics are well positioned to create customer value and reap in a Digital rewards like loyalty and efficiency. Yet there remains a relative paucity of discussion about the customer side of the digital economy and how insight-driven design must complement data collection. Economy We seek to address this gap in knowledge by developing a framework that evaluates the four kinds of value – economic, cultural, social, and information capital – that customers expect in their exchanges with firms in a digital economy.
    [Show full text]
  • Social Engagement in Times of Mourning
    University of Amsterdam Department of Media Studies New Media & Digital Culture MA Thesis 2015 -2016 24 June 2016 Social Engagement in Times of Mourning A Platform Analysis of the Social Activity in the Aftermath of the Paris and Brussels Attacks By Jennifer Swagers | 5947030 Name supervisor: Esther Weltevrede | Name second reader: Richard Rogers ABSTRACT This thesis outlines how social engagement has been facilitated on Facebook in times of mourning as a result of crisis events. It states that there has been a shift towards a new kind of engagement that is partly dependent on Facebook’s grammars of action. To perform this study, this research made use of four cases and their data, namely the Pray For Paris Community Page, the Pray For Paris 13/11/2015 Group, the Pray For Brussels Community Page, and the Pray for brussels Group. The four cases were created in the aftermath of the Paris and Brussels terror attacks, which took place the 13th of November, 2015, and the 22nd of March, 2016. Through the Digital Methods tool Netvizz, this research extracted the data of the first two weeks of each of the four pages, after the related crisis event took place. This research is placed in a critical discursive analysis about engagement in relation to platform studies, by using theories about engagement, mourning, grammars of action, and affordances. The analysis indicates that the Like-endorsement is a new form of intentional memorialising in times of mourning as a result of crisis events, which leads to a contribution in the field of platform, mourning, and engagement studies.
    [Show full text]
  • Focus Group 1D Dec 05 Final Report
    September 2016 WORKING GROUP 2 Emergency Alerting Platforms Social Media & Complementary Alerting Methods – Recommended Strategies & Best Practices Final Report & Recommendations The Communications Security, Reliability and Interoperability Council V Social Media & Complementary Alerting September, 2016 Table of Contents 1 Results in Brief .................................................................................................................... - 3 - 1.1 Executive Summary .................................................................................................... - 3 - 2 Introduction ......................................................................................................................... - 3 - 2.1 CSRIC V - Structure ................................................................................................... - 4 - 2.2 Working Group 2 – Alerting Membership. ................................................................. - 4 - 3 Background ......................................................................................................................... - 6 - 4 Complementary Alerting Strategies .................................................................................... - 7 - 4.1 Emergency Alerting Systems ...................................................................................... - 8 - 5 Social Media ...................................................................................................................... - 12 - 5.1 Background ..............................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Download Presentation
    URBAN CONVERSATIONS Internet and Cities: How it’s Changing the Way we Live Rajat Kathuria 20th October, 2016 Source: Finance & Development Internet Penetration in Urban India Total Rural Urban 94% internet subscribers Internet are using wireless Subscribers 342.65 111.94 230.71 connections including (in million) mobile and fixed wireless (wi-fi, wi-max) Internet 26.98 12.8 58.28 Density In addition urban India is also maximizing the use of Internet through Public Wi-Fi hotspots. As of August 2016, there were 31,000 Wi-Fi hotspots installed in India (0.5% airports and railway stations, 41% hotels, 58% shopping malls, restaurants, shops and retail outlets) 180 160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 Density Density as on March2016 Internet Rural Density Urban Density Source: IAMAI 2015 Internet Usage in Urban India A user in India uses an average of 11 apps in a day. A user in India spends an average of 3 hours on a mobile phone in a day, which is one hour less than worldwide users and two hours less than US users. The ratio between male to female Internet users in Urban India is 62:38 In Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities of India the consumption of mobile video content is much higher than that in bigger metros Smartphones are driving Internet usage in India - 60% YouTube views are from mobile phones. Children in urban India (between 9-17 years) spend about 4 hours a day on the Internet mostly on mobile phones. Source: Reports by Google, Telenor, Quettra, and IAMAI Planet of the phones: From Homo-sapiens to Phono-sapiens The Smartphone is • Ubiquitous • Addictive and • Transformative Smart phones and Internet As of December 2015, >230 million smartphone users.
    [Show full text]
  • Environmental Activism and Social Media
    Petsch 1 Environmental Activism and Social Media Anjelica Petsch Environmental activism is not new but has received a heightened platform in the anthropomorphic era through the use of social media to create the term “Cyberactivism”. Environmental cyberactivism has established new policy reforms for a sustainable lifestyle, brought communities together through natural disasters, but in some cases have also gained support and momentum from social media followers supplying discourse but little physical effort, or “slacktivism” (popularized by Evgeny Morozov), towards the same cause. Social media has allowed quick sharing properties of photos and other posts showing over 150 million metric tons of human single use wastes, like straws, plastic bags, etc., floating in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch or harming and killing marine life (Viswanathan, 2018). These images and posts lead to environmental organizations declaring an end to single use plastic, such as the Surfrider Foundation, an organization determined to protect Earth’s oceans and beaches, has set out to declare 2018 as “the year we say goodbye to straws” (Houck, 2018) as around 175 million plastic straws are used and disposed of daily (Viswanathan, 2018). Other environmental activist groups began challenging legislature to ban or reduce plastic bags and containers in order to decrease human waste and pollution. One impactful image originally shared on Instagram, on September 12th, 2017, by a photographer, Justin Hofman, was of a small Petsch 2 seahorse holding a used, plastic q-tip in the ocean off the coast of Indonesia. Hofman shared the image with the caption: Figure 1 Photo credits to Justin Hofman “It’s a photo I wish didn’t exit but now that it does I want everyone to see it.
    [Show full text]
  • Social Media Data for Good
    THE POTENTIAL OF SOCIAL MEDIA INTELLIGENCE TO IMPROVE PEOPLE’S LIVES Social Media Data for Good September 24, 2017 By Stefaan G. Verhulst and Andrew Young THE POTENTIAL OF SOCIAL MEDIA INTELLIGENCE TO IMPROVE PEOPLE’S LIVES Social Media Data for Good September 24, 2017 By Stefaan G. Verhulst and Andrew Young* COVER IMAGE: YOLANDA SUN * Stefaan G. Verhulst is Co-Founder and Chief Research and Development Officer of The Governance Lab Andrew Young is Knowledge Director at The Governance Lab 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS . 4 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY . 6 I . INTRODUCTION: TODAY’S PROBLEMS REQUIRE NEW INTELLIGENCE . 18 THE UBIQUITY AND POTENTIAL OF SOCIAL MEDIA DATA . 19 THE PROMISE—AND CHALLENGES—OF SOCIAL MEDIA INTELLIGENCE THROUGH DATA COLLABORATIVES . 21 II . SOCIAL MEDIA DATA COLLABORATIVES–CREATING SOCIAL MEDIA INTELLIGENCE TO IMPROVE PEOPLE’S LIVES . 23 III . SOCIAL MEDIA DATA COLLABORATIVES IN ACTION . 29 SITUATIONAL AWARENESS AND RESPONSE . 31 Facebook Disaster Maps .. 33 Tracking Anti-Vaccination Sentiment in Eastern European Social Media Networks . 38 Facebook Population Density Maps . 42 KNOWLEDGE CREATION AND TRANSFER . 46 Yelp Dataset Challenge . 48 MIT Laboratory for Social Machines’ Electome Project . 51 LinkedIn Economic Graph Research Program . 57 PUBLIC SERVICE DESIGN AND DELIVERY . 60 Facebook Future of Business Survey . 62 Easing Urban Congestion Using Waze Traffic Data . 65 THE POTENTIAL OF SOCIAL MEDIA INTELLIGENCE TO IMPROVE PEOPLE’S LIVES IMPROVE OF SOCIAL MEDIA INTELLIGENCE TO THE POTENTIAL Facebook Insights for Impact Zika . 69 PREDICTION AND FORECASTING . 72 Tracking the Flu Using Tweets . 74 Predicting Floods with Flickr Metatags . 77 Predicting Adverse Drug Reactions by Mining Health Social Media Streams and Forums .
    [Show full text]