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Vote Report India Launches

Vote Report India - Header

“The world’s largest democracy, India, goes to election starting April 16, 2009. The month long general elections to the 15th Lok Sabha will be held in five phases on April 16, April 22, April 23, April 30, May 7 and May 13, and the results will be announced on May 16.”

The last week has seen an incredible amount of activity amongst the Indian team putting together VoteReport.in – a site to track the upcoming elections in India. At Ushahidi, we’ve seen a number of deployments of the platform, but few have been as well organized and grown with as much community input as this Indian one, led by Gaurav Mishra. On the technical side, Selvam Velmurugan of eMoshka, a non-partisan non-profit organization to enable stronger democracies through increased citizen awareness and engagement, has done most of the heavy lifting. Selvam is also organizing India’s first Gov 2.0 Barcamp.

Indians can send in reports four ways, by

  1. SMS to 5676785
  2. Email to report@votereport.in
  3. Twitter with #votereport
  4. Online via web form

Vote Report India - Screenshot

Interestingly, Indian has a Twitter-like service called SMS GupShup that has millions of users subscribing to certain channels. The team is creating city-specific update accounts on Twitter and SMSGupShup for the top 8 cities in India (ex: VoteReportMumbai, VoteReportDelhi etc.). They can then point the RSS feeds for these cities to these accounts and give users four options for subscribing to alerts: by email, by RSS, or by SMS on Twitter or SMSGupShup.

How to get involved

Vote Report India - Badge

  • Let your family and friends in India know of this initiative. Email and SMS them the info.
  • If you would like to get involved the best place to start is at the wiki used to organize this initiative.
  • If you’re from the media you can start on the Press Page, or get in touch with members of the team.
  • Blog, Twitter and GupShup the link.

Ushahidi’s First Elections and Swift River

This will be the first time that Ushahidi is being used in the workup to an election. It will be interesting to watch how it is used and how much of a factor it will play in gathering information from the general public. The groundwork for this interaction with the public and with media outlets is being setup now, so the team is optimistic that there will be a good number of incoming reports to work with.

Swift River is an initiative that seeks to do two very important things, both of which are crucial for not just Ushahidi, but for many emergency response activities in the future. First, it gathers as many possible streams of data about a particular crisis event as possible. Second, using a two-part filter, that stream of data is filtered through both machine based algorithms and humans to better understand the veracity and level of importance of any piece of information.

Concurrently to the rollout of VoteReport India, Swift River has has gotten to the prototype phase through the planning and hard work of Andrew Turner, Chris Blow and Kaushal Jhalla. Andrew took the foundational elements used for the initial “Twitter Vote Report” engine as a starting point.

We hope to see a greater number of information streams coming online, and a greater level of understanding of that information through the use of Swift River.

Posted in Deployment, Strategy, Ushahidi. Tagged with , , , , , , , .

14 Responses

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  1. ricx said

    i m not goin to cast ma vote this year becoz all old people r taking the charge of country n no one knows who gonna tapak anytym ,each n every neta in this country is so rich tht he cant even put it in banks so he opened a account in swizz banks bullshit all netas yeh neta ko samane khada karke goli ya banduk se nahin nuclear bomb se uddado sach mein i m so angry tht i why i m n indian jst becoz of this ass hole netas

  2. Interesting. Right now there is a big debate on whether Non Resident Indians should be allowed to vote in Indian elections. The obvious objection is that they do not have to face the consequences of their actions.

    http://www.the-nri.com/index.php/2010/07/nris-right-to-vote-in-indian-elections/

Continuing the Discussion

  1. The Story Behind Vote Report India: Citizen-Powered Election Monitoring | Gauravonomics Blog linked to this post on April 7, 2009

    [...] see: Great posts by Erik Hersman and Nancy Scola on how Vote Report India came together. Plus, my earlier posts on how political [...]

  2. Global Voices Online » India: The Advent of Citizen-Driven Election Monitoring linked to this post on April 8, 2009

    [...] Hersman writes: At Ushahidi, we’ve seen a number of deployments of the platform, but few have been as well [...]

  3. Vote Report India | DesiPundit linked to this post on April 8, 2009

    [...] might be the first crowdsourced election information network so more the merrier. Gaurav Mishra and Erik Hersman have taken the lead and are looking for volunteers if you are [...]

  4. Ushahidi Comes to India for the Elections (Updated) « iRevolution linked to this post on April 9, 2009

    [...] You can read more about the project here and about the core team here. It really is an honor to be a part of this amazing group. We also have an official VoteReport blog here. I also highly recommend reading Gaurav Mishra’s blog post on VoteReport here and Ushahidi’s here. [...]

  5. Vote Report India, a collaborative citizen-powered election monitoring platform for Indian goes LIVE « citizen.africa linked to this post on April 11, 2009

    [...] Vote Report India Launches (ushahidi.com) [...]

  6. Global Voices हिन्दी में » भारत : आम चुनावों में लगी जनता की पैनी नज़र linked to this post on April 14, 2009

    [...] हर्समेन लिखते हैं: उशाहिदी के हमने बहुत से प्रयोग देखे [...]

  7. Global Voices Advocacy » The Story Behind Vote Report India: Citizen-Powered Election Monitoring linked to this post on April 18, 2009

    [...] see: Great posts by Erik Hersman and Nancy Scola on how Vote Report India came together. Plus, my earlier posts on how political [...]

  8. The great leveller: Mobile phones in India flag potential for m-gov elsewhere too « ICT for Peacebuilding (ICT4Peace) linked to this post on May 12, 2009

    [...] such as the Ushahidi based Vote Report India only work because of the high penetration of and access to mobiles. As last year’s terrorist [...]

  9. Combating the digital divide in the developing world with mobile phones | Online Journalism Blog linked to this post on December 21, 2009

    [...] the information is filtered through machine-based algorithms to confirm accuracy. Ushahidi used a similar method to track the Indian elections earlier this year through VoteReport.in. In India, “moblogging” or [...]

  10. Election monitoring using new media: Notes from my experience in Sri Lanka « ICT for Peacebuilding (ICT4Peace) linked to this post on March 10, 2010

    [...] the use of Ushahidi as a platform for election monitoring, which has been used quite effectively in India amongst other [...]

  11. Data.Gov.In To Launch; Use Cases: Powercuts.in; Challenges - MediaNama linked to this post on June 6, 2011

    [...] incidentally), using the Ushahidi platform. The Ushahidi platform has been used previously for Vote Report India. A crowdsourced document with suggestions and objectives with suggestions was soon set up, and [...]

  12. Can we crowdsource a better world? « joycediscovers linked to this post on July 28, 2011

    [...] in Kenya. Since then the platform has expanded throughout the world and is used to map the 2009 Indian elections, the worldwide swine flue outbreaks, harassment of women in Egypt, this year’s earthquake in New [...]

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