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Ushahidi-Fletcher Situation Room Update

We really couldn’t do this project with out the help of the Boston situation room. They are combing through the reports, getting updates via many different forms of media – basically making sense of a mountain of incoming data. On top of that, they’re coordinating with many more thousands of individuals all over the world to help find critical data on locations, needs and confirmations with the people on the ground in Haiti.

Fletcher situation room for Ushahidi Haiti
(by @mbelinsky)

[This message from Patrick Meier, Director of crisis mapping and partnerships for Ushahidi, who is coordinating out of Boston and is the lead on the Haiti deployment for us. (A video)]

This has probably been the most incredible day thus far thanks to Brian, David, Josh & co: the 4636 SMS feature is up and running. Team, this is completely unprecedented in the history of humanitarian response. We’re getting 100’s of text messages into Ushahidi, translated into English thanks to Brian’s 10,000 Haitian volunteers. We can then map this, or ask for more information (with pre-arranged text in English or Creole, eg, please send more location info). This SMS from Ushahidi then goes back to the original sender of the original SMS, who can then reply with the more precise location info (say in Creole). This goes back to the 10,000 Haitian translators who translate into English and then this goes back to us at Ushahidi in the appropriate SMS thread for us to map. Honestly, the word that comes to mind to describe this is “absurd”, in the best possible, most positive sense of the word. This, Team, is what I am fond of calling an iRevolution.

Also an amazing live Skype chat between Anna here in the Sit Room and Eric Rasmussen (InSTEDD and former Chief Medical Officer of the US Navy). Eric skyping from tarmac of PoP airport asking for GPS coordinates of the most obscure addresses, sites, locations and Anna providing these in record time. She has wowed the entire team in PaP including military, UN, etc. Incredible to witness all this real time networking and collaboration. Mark my words, the response to Haiti is a turning point in the history of disaster response. All of this is completely unprecedented. I could go on and on with more of these “absurd” anecdotes, but this is supposed to be Situation Update

Fletcher Ushahidi Situation Room

Fletcher Ushahidi Situation Room

Here’s a pic from the just-opened Washington DC situation room:

The Ushahidi-Fletcher situation room in DC

The Ushahidi-Fletcher situation room in DC

Thanks everyone!

Needs

We sent out an email to contacts at Fletcher, Harvard and MIT for a training at Fletcher on Tuesday evening that will allow us to transition and remain sustainable on the Haiti project. We need to figure out a way for the greater community to keep up the work that started at Fletcher and that needs to be sustained to ensure that reports are being approved.

Please contact us at the Situation Room if you’d like to be involved in that.

Posted in Community, Deployment, Disaster, Team, Ushahidi. Tagged with , , , , , , , .

15 Responses

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  1. stunning crowd sourcing , congrats

    herewith another tool http://bit.ly/92QeDE

  2. Hmm. It has been done before, folks – I think it was Malaysia that had an emergency SMS system in place prior to a disaster. Also, as far back as 2005, people have been working on such systems (including myself)… so be careful with the ‘first’ stuff. Other than that – strong work. Great stuff. :-)

  3. Excellent stuff…!

Continuing the Discussion

  1. Unreal 3 Environment Piston Room | Video Games linked to this post on 18 January 2010

    [...] Ushahidi-Fletcher Situation Room Update – The Ushahidi Blog [...]

  2. Responding to the Situation in Haiti : INCITE Women's Health … | Women's Health Wisdom linked to this post on 18 January 2010

    [...] Ushahidi-Fletcher Situation Room Update – The Ushahidi Blog [...]

  3. Crisis Mapping and Collaboration Between Western and African ICT Developers for Haiti Quake Response at Tadias Magazine linked to this post on 19 January 2010

    [...] Boston-based Peter Meier, Director of Media & Partnerships at Ushahidi and PhD student at The Fletcher School at Tufts University, also blogs about the Ushahidi-Fletcher Situation Room and virtual collaboration to link volunteers and translators for the 4636 SMS campaign. He notes that approximately 10,000 Haitian volunteers are translating the incoming SMS messages from Creole into English. “We really couldn’t do this project with out the help of the Boston situation room. They are combing through the reports, getting updates via many different forms of media – basically making sense of a mountain of incoming data,” he writes. [...]

  4. Tools – Haiti Earthquake response and recovery » Nordic Geospatial Blog linked to this post on 19 January 2010

    [...] Tools – Haiti Earthquake response and recovery Category: Common Operational Picture (COP), Communications, Data, Disaster Preparedness, DoD, GIS Tools, GoogleEarth, Government, Mobile, News, United Nations – Tags: earthquake, haiti, Port-au-Prince, ReliefWeb, UNOSAT, US Coast Guard, USGS – Administrator – 4:58 am UPDATE 1200 GMT 20100119 – Ushahidi, iRevolution on CNN http://blog.ushahidi.com/index.php/2010/01/18/ushahidi-fletcher-situation-room-update/ [...]

  5. Krisensichere Aufklaerung | stk linked to this post on 20 January 2010

    [...] erst einmal ausgefallen waren. Trotzdem einmal interessant, so etwas in Action zu sehen, vor allem in diesem riesigen Massstab, dem gegenueber das — momentan fuer raeumlich deutlich eingeschraenkterere Lagen gedachte [...]

  6. Texts, Tweets Saving Haitians From the Rubble « PixelVulture linked to this post on 22 January 2010

    [...] a group of volunteers in Boston pinpointed the origin of the message, sent using the 4636 SMS shortcode. They rapidly relayed the [...]

  7. Mobiles to Rescue in Haiti « art + ed + mobi + pop linked to this post on 22 January 2010

    [...] Join Reddit’s Haiti relief fundraising drive with Direct Relief International. Then a group of volunteers in Boston pinpointed the origin of the message, sent using the 4636 SMS shortcode. They rapidly relayed the [...]

  8. Haiti’s need for community led reconstruction « 6 to cut, 4 to sharpen linked to this post on 28 January 2010

    [...] on exactly that. The Haiti case became interesting to me because I watched first hand from the Ushahidi Situation Room in Boston how tags & RTs helped encourage open-source collaboration. Many groups from the ICRC to [...]

  9. links for 2010-01-29 « 6 to cut, 4 to sharpen linked to this post on 29 January 2010

    [...] Ushahidi-Fletcher Situation Room Update | Ushahidi Shots of me in the volunteer situation room in Boston (tags: boston ushahidi volunteerism pictures) [...]

  10. A year later, lessons for media from Haiti earthquake response » Nieman Journalism Lab » Pushing to the Future of Journalism linked to this post on 11 January 2011

    [...] through all the data were centers far outside of Haiti, like one group in Boston that helped geolocate emergency texts, information that was then passed along to relief workers on location. Groups of Haitian [...]

  11. 携帯メールが少女を救った « 新聞紙学的 linked to this post on 20 September 2012

    [...] アリエルという7歳の少女と、34歳と50歳の2人の女性が、地震発生から100時間以上たって、倒壊した5階建てスーパーマーケットから救出された。そのきっかけは、スーパーの中から発信された、生存者を知らせる携帯メールだったというのだ。この記事では、携帯メールを誰が発信し、どうやって救助隊に届いたのか、詳しいことには触れていない。  だが、ワイアードのこの記事が、その疑問に答えてくれる。  記事が取り上げているのは「ウシャヒディ」という、ケニアの人権支援活動から派生したボストンのボランティアグループ。  このグループが、現地からの救援要請を、携帯メールで受け付けるシステムを開発。そこに寄せられたメールを、1万人のハイチ人の協力で、現地のハイチ語(フランス系クレオール言語)から英語に翻訳してもらう。これを受けて、グループはGPSも活用して生存者の現場を特定するなどし、無料IP電話スカイプなども使って現地の救援隊に通知しているのだという。  さらに、緊急度ごとに分類された被害状況は、地図上に落とし込んで公開している。  自由なネットの力は、確かにすごい。 Share this:TwitterFacebookいいね:いいね最初の「いいね」をつけてみませんか。 [...]

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