Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

Saturday, 18 October 2014

Facebook adds emergency check-in feature for natural disasters


In 2011, when a deadly tsunami set off 30-foot tidal waves that crashed into the shores of Japan, flooding entire cities and damaging nuclear power plants, Facebook became an instrumental tool in connecting loved ones and alerting family members to their safety.

The social network is now rolling out a new check-in feature for use during such natural disasters. Safety Check, as the new product is called, was unveiled by CEO Mark Zuckerberg Thursday afternoon in Tokyo, and is meant to help Facebook users quickly alert friends and family that they are safe during times of crisis, like earthquakes or tsunamis.

Safety Check works by sending users a push notification asking them if they are safe whenever a natural disaster strikes the area they list as their current location. User’s can then see a list of their Facebook friends in the area, and see which users have checked in as safe and which have not.

Facebook will determine what constitutes a disaster worthy of a check-in by communicating with local authorities and experts, says Marcy Scott Lynn, global policy programs manager at Facebook. Safety Check has a few added elements — for example, you can check in for a Friend, and Facebook will ask you to check in if it sees you are traveling in a compromised area — but for the most part, Safety Check is intended for sharing one simple status: Yes, I’m fine.



The initial idea for Safety Check came from Facebook’s Japan office following the 2011 earthquake and ensuing tsunami, hence Zuckerberg’s announcement in Tokyo. Employees at the time developed a Disaster Message Board within Facebook to help families and friends connect in the wake of potential disasters, but the tool was limited to Japanese users and slowly faded as Facebook continued to evolve.

Eleven months ago, product manager Sharon Zeng and software engineer Peter Cottle picked up the project during a company-wide hackathon at the company’s headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif.

Facebook didn’t partner with any outside organizations on the project, so for now, if a user does not check in during a disaster, authorities won’t be notified in any way. It’s possible that Facebook could partner with groups like the Red Cross down the road, but there are no partnership plans in the works, according to Lynn. “We recognize this tool isn’t for everyone or every time,” she added. “It wasn’t designed as a first responder tool.”

Other online communities, including Twitter, have also added features for sharing important information during natural disasters. Facebook’s Safety Check is now active for all 1.3 billion users.

Saturday 18 October 2014

http://recode.net/2014/10/15/facebook-adds-emergency-check-in-feature-for-natural-disasters/

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Friday, 15 March 2013

Digital tombstones: Life, death and Facebook



On Facebook, a billion users around the world document their relationships and share their children’s first steps, growing and aging in plain view. But what happens when they die?

Preserved forever in stark blue and white pixels, comments, photos, observations, and interests don’t disappear when bodies do. Whichever afterlife you believe in, Facebook could be the path to immortality.

An increasing number of mourners struggle with grief stemming from the leftover profiles of lost loved ones. Facebook developers have even created features that attempt to handle this new phenomenon. Physical death and digital death are two very different things.

As I perused vacation photos, drunken Instagram snapshots, and disoriented status updates last summer, my half-asleep eyes landed on a photo. A boy I’d gone to school with and had vaguely known since middle school was pictured on a hospital bed attached to innumerable tubes. Sober, familiar faces surrounded him.

Nap Cantwell died when he was 18 years old, after an accident in which his bike collided with a van. Andrew Imanaka, one of my best friends and one of Nap’s, took the photo.

“I figured it was the last picture anyone would take of him alive, to be honest,” Imanaka said. “How else are they (acquaintances, far away friends) going to find out [about Nap] in this day and age?”

Posts cover Nap’s Facebook wall, with new ones added often. Childhood photos, pictures of tattoos and tags memorializing him, and simple R.I.P.s and thinking-of-yous fill the digitized profile left by a very real human being.

According to UC Irvine Ph.D. candidate Jed Brubaker, who spent the last three and a half years studying the phenomenon of death in social media, 30 million Facebook profiles belong to the deceased, making up a significant proportion of the Facebook population.

“Social media, broadly, does a really bad job of accounting for the fact that people might die,” Brubaker said. “But when I originally began research, people were confused about what I was even talking about. I had to stop and explain myself.”

People don’t think about how they will be survived online when creating their Facebook profiles, but people have attempted to preserve their presence and that of others since the early days of the Internet.

Online memorials began around 15 years ago with personal webpages and cyber obituaries coming from as early as 1996. Early memorials like this were impossible to find unless friends or relatives were looking for them — unlike deceased Facebook members, who can show up on your “people you may know” sidebar.

“A funeral used to be a moment where specific individuals at a specific time and space meet to grieve an individual,” Brubaker said. “Facebook breaks this wide open.”

Liz Litts, a Shoreline, Wash., native, died suddenly in 2010 at the age of 18. She had more than 500 Facebook friends, and within 24 hours of her death at least 100 posts from various people who knew her expressed their sympathy, according to her friend Mackenzie Fenton Conlan.

Empathy, disagreements, and relationships from real life can manifest themselves on Facebook in ways more serious and real than one would expect.

“We had a falling out due to pointless high school drama, and now I regret it more than anything,” said Melanie Yordanova, who was best friends with Litts at one point. “I saw her 24 hours exactly before it happened, and she hugged me and said she loved me. The thing I regret most is not saying I love her back and also deleting her from Facebook and not accepting her friend request when she added me back.”

But dealing with loss over social networks is not for everyone; sometimes comments on a website seem distant, and constant reminders of a lost loved one are overwhelming.

“It took me a while to write on her page, because I didn’t think that people should resort to Facebook to grieve,” Conlan said. “However, it ended up being somewhat therapeutic.”

People who aren’t comfortable with Facebook aren’t really in a position to do anything about it, Brubaker said. In the same way that showing disapproval of the way a funeral is conducted is seen as disrespectful to the deceased, there’s no real way to disagree with the legitimacy of a Facebook memorial. This phenomenon is well-established. The moral and ethical questions it raises aren’t going anywhere.

“What is the proper way to grieve that guy from 20 years ago?” Brubaker asked. “It puts individuals in a tenuous place; they want to be respectful.”

Facebook death is often most uncomfortable for people distantly related to or vaguely associated with the deceased, because there is no social norm for responding to the situation. Before Facebook, these individuals probably would not still be connected to the deceased. Today, not only are they connected, but they have the opportunity to respond to the tragedy no matter where they are.

Facebook has provided the option to “memorialize” a page since 2009, in an attempt to end this problem. Family members must contact Facebook with proof of death for the process to be completed. From there, the page of the deceased will transform into a place to post memories about the person who will no longer show up in “suggested friends” or public searches.

“I have only talked to two individuals that have actually gone through this process, and it takes a long time,” Brubaker said. “It seems, in practice, there’s a lot of ambiguity about who has the right to memorialize an account.”

Various problems come from this ambiguity. Parents can delete friends they didn’t approve of after the death of a child, and new Facebook users cannot be friends with the deceased after the account has been memorialized. Future relatives cannot access it, and friends cannot modify it. There are no real guidelines about how ethical it is to gain access to someone else’s profile or who is allowed to do this.

Even people who don’t communicate with their parents usually have their accounts inherited by them regardless, Brubaker said. There are also questions about inheritance by domestic partners in states that have not legalized same-sex marriage.

“I’m a little suspicious. Should we be relying on these old, traditional values, or are there a broader set of people that should be included in input in an account?” Brubaker said. “These profiles have very rich afterlives; to lock these accounts down can really limit the opportunity for people to connect and remember each other and, in some scenarios, can be downright traumatic.”

Litts’ page has just such a rich afterlife.

“Since she has passed, her page is filled with people sharing memories that they had with Liz,” Conlan said. “I go back from time to time and post on there memories, songs, quotes, whatever. It’s kind of like a little remembrance page.”

Conlan and Yordanova mentioned the way Facebook helped to organize meetings and remembrances in honor of Litts. It also allowed for long-distance relatives and friends away at school to connect and share what they would have said at her funeral, had they been able to make it.

“Losing someone close to you can be one of the most difficult things, especially since you don’t have control, but the support of everyone was a huge help,” Yordanova said. “I got to see everyone express their sorrows in different ways, and in the end I felt less alone.”

Facebook already handles our day-to-day lives. Logically, it should also handle our deaths. Unfortunately, the legal framework governing these memorials is behind the times.

The Stored Communications Act, a federal law enacted in 1986, and the voluntary terms of service agreement used by sites like Facebook prohibit companies from sharing the personal information of users. This includes providing passwords to mourning relatives, and the law prevents estate managers from attempting to access Facebook accounts because of the possibility of being charged with cyber crimes.

Various state legislatures have taken up the cause, including Oregon and Nebraska. Yet it may not reach Congress for some time, as a bill aimed at modernizing the Act failed in the House Judiciary Committee last year.

The mourning process is one of the most intimate and personal of human experiences. Now this process has shifted dramatically into the public sphere, raising a slew of new legal questions.

The more pressing questions, however, have to do with the morality these interactive epitaphs. The line between what should and shouldn’t be online is becoming harder to see.

Friday 15 March 2013

http://dailyuw.com/archive/2013/03/14/arts-leisure/digital-tombstones-life-death-and-facebook#.UUM66UfVWCA

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Monday, 12 November 2012

Thai 'trophy shots' shock mourners

When Perth travel agent Michelle Smith was stabbed to death in Phuket, ambulance workers shocked her grieving friends by posing for a photo with her dead body and placed on facebook.

But scenes like these are commonplace in Thailand, a country with an extraordinarily desensitised attitude towards death and relaxed regulations when it comes to the treatment of dead bodies.

Alan Morison, an Australian journalist who lives in Phuket and runs the local news website Phuketwan, was the first Western reporter at the scene when Mrs Smith was killed in a bungled street robbery in June.

He said her distraught friends looked on as the ambulance workers took a "trophy shot" with her body.

“[I] tried to explain this process to some of her friends,” he said. “To me it simply represents the acceptance of death in Thai society ... I neither condone it or reject it, simply see it as a cultural difference."

These cultural differences can be offensive for the families of Australians who die while visiting Thailand.

Two weeks ago 27-year-old Angus Campbell, from northern NSW, died of an apparent drug overdose in Bangkok.

Less than a day after his death a graphic image of his slumped body was splashed across a major tabloid news site.

While publishing similar images would cause outrage in Australia, in Thailand it is an accepted practice of local media, who are usually given full access to photograph any crime scene.

Marko Cunningham, a New Zealander who has been a volunteer ambulance worker in Bangkok for the past 12 years and runs the Bangkok Free Ambulance organisation, said Thai people were not offended by these displays.

“The news on TV and newspapers has always shown full uncensored pictures of morbid scenes, it’s a very cultural thing, just like their funerals are always open coffin before cremation,” Mr Cunningham said.

“They see [death] every day in the streets and their lives. Everyone has a family member who has been killed in a road accident or other accident of some sort.” Why ambulance workers pose with dead bodies

The majority of ambulance workers in Thailand are not paid – they are volunteers, required only to undertake a two-day first responder training course.

When they arrive at the scene of a death they are responsible for taking care of the body until a paid official arrives to move them to the morgue.

While undertaking the task they will often take photos to post on Facebook or other social media.

“The posing with a dead body is a pride thing, to show that one has helped take care of that body,” Mr Cunningham said.

“It’s a pride in doing a job that society generally shuns.”

In some of the photographs the ambulance workers can be seen pointing at the corpse. “Pointing at a dead body is just something that has come from pointing to small things in pictures to highlight them,” Mr Cunningham said.

“It’s a little strange that the Thais still point at the obvious but [it’s] just something that they have actually picked up from Western media, although interpreted in a sometimes bizarre way.”

Nothing too graphic to publish – except cigarettes

Mr Morison’s news website Phuketwan has a mostly-Western readership but does not shy away from running photos of dead bodies when he deems it necessary.

“We have published shots of the dead on occasions where I thought it was important to do so. I remember especially the body of a drowned 10-year-old boy being wheeled past me in the foyer of a hospital, straight out of an ambulance,” Mr Morison said.

“He should never have died. There should have been lifeguards on the beach that day. We ran the photo.

“One of our photojournalists attended the scene of a crash where six Burmese died, coming down Big Buddha Hill. One of them was a young girl. Her father survived.

“The series of shots of the girl being treated by paramedics, then the father being told she was dead, then cradling her in his arms, was deeply moving.

“Although it was clearly an intrusion into grief, I regarded that series as a dramatic message to drivers to be safe. We ran it.

“I have nothing but respect for the way people are treated here, with dignity and respect, and with openness and honesty, after death. Other societies could learn a lot.”

While the Thai news is laden with gore, the media is sensitive when it comes to a more mainstream killer – cigarettes.

“It’s surprising to see rape scenes, drugs, and dead bodies on TV shows, movies, etc but the main thing that is pixelated is cigarettes,” Mr Cunningham said.

“A man can point a gun and blow someone’s brains out but you can’t see him put the cigarette in his mouth!

“Also different TV stations have different things they pixelate. One station might pixelate cigarettes but another pixelate guns. It’s a little confusing. There seems to be no standards.”

Mr Cunningham said he believed the culture was slowly changing to align with Western values, and he had recently seen some volunteers begin to pixelate their gory images. But he said he respected the way the Thai people accept death and do not shy away from it.

“I now realise how obsessed with the ‘horror’ of death that Westerners are,” Mr Cunningham said.

“For Thais it’s sad to say goodbye but they see it just as the end of one journey and the start of another. We wish them well on their next journey and hope we meet them in the next life to be friends again.”

Monday 12 November 2012

http://news.ninemsn.com.au/world/2012/11/12/15/45/why-thai-ambulance-workers-take-trophy-shots

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Wednesday, 18 January 2012

Facebook group dedicated to finding the missing.

https://www.facebook.com/groups/232027703542759/?notif_t=group_activity

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