(via How We Can Use Livestreaming Apps to Promote Justice | WIRED)
From Passive Witnessing to Action: the âMobil-Eyes Usâ vision
For human rights activists and citizen witnesses who Periscope, Meerkat or Bambuser the scene of violations, there are ways to move people from being passive viewers to active witnesses who see something and do something. The key here is to offer actions to viewers that go beyond watching and commenting, and simultaneously to make sure we generate empathy and connection. Within the âMobil-Eyes Usâ project weâve been exploring how layering tech innovation in smart calendaring and task-routing on top of robust tactics and storytelling with live video enables this.
What if five frontline LGBT activists in a repressive country knew thousands were watching and willing to call their governments if violence happened at a Pride rally? What if âdistant witnessesâ banded together to identify abusive officers in the suppression of a peaceful protest, and called ahead to police stations to say âWe know youâve taken people detained to this stationâ? What would it be like if the authorities could literally see the number of people watching a livestream via on a counter on the front of a camera? Could that deter violence in a protest?
Beyond the power of the crowd, sometimes all that matters is that one person is watching and supporting. Using the power of smart task-routing we could match a need on the ground with the right person, available then, with a useful skill or expertise: a lawyer to provide legal guidance to a community during a forced eviction or protest, or a video editor available to turn the visceral experience of a livestream into something much more shareable on Facebook and Twitter and YouTube after the fact.
Stay tuned [LIVE] for developments. This is going to be a bumpy ride, but the destination is worth getting to!













